Kansas City Sun

Saturday, September 30, 1916

Kansas City, Missouri

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HUGHES=DICKEY=LAMM All Will Win [Picture of a man in a suit with a tie]. an orator of much ability and the only Negro member of the Executive Committee of the Fifth Congressional District. Dr. J. H. Garnett Sues Richest Nun a Visitor A WONDERFUL SINGER If not, don't miss the last opportunity of hearing the sweetest singer that Texas has given the platform of today. whose singing stirs the hearts and souls of her audience till many are moved to tears. The Sun Goes to 36 States and Canada. Are Your Relatives and Friends Getting It? VOLUME IX. NUMBER 5. HUGH HON. W. C. HU an orator of much ability and the only Committee of the Fifth Con Dr. J. H. Garnett Sues Ri EX-PRESIDENT OF WESTERN COLLEGE DEMANDS ALLEGED BACK PAY. Dr. J. H. Garnett, former president of Western College, Macon, Mo., a school conducted by the aptist denomination of this state has sent the trustee board in the Macon county courts for back pay at the rate of $100.00 per month. The board feels that they have met every obligation due Dr. Garnett, and that his suit is the result of "soreness" on being deposed as president, to which position Prof. Inman E. Page was elected. Dr. Garnett is one of the best known man in the state, and was for many years connected with Lincoln Institute. Western College has been having much trouble on account of its inability to occupy property recently purchased in Kansas City and this new trouble does not add anything to the pleasure of the board. DR. WM. H. THOMAS, the brilliant and distinguished pastor of Allen Chapel who has wrought many helpful reforms during his pas- torate and who is urging the 1300 members of Allen to rally to his sup- port in collecting his Conference claims. QUARTERLY MEETING C. M. E. CHURCH. The Paseo C. M. E. Church, 1815 Paseo, will hold its fourth and last quarter for this conference year next Sunday, October 1. The Presiding Elder will preach morning and evening. Rev. T. J. Wilson of St. John will preach at 3:00 p. m. The public is invited. We are expecting a great time. J. R. McCLAIN, Pastor. A WONDERFUL HAVE YOU HEAR If not, don't miss the last oppo est singer that Texas has given the Miss Lula M. At Allen Chapel Wednesda whose singing stirs the hearts an many are move The Kansas City Sun KATE DREXEL DEVOTES LIFE AND FORTUNE TO MISSION WORK. The Woman Who Has Spent Thirty Years in Uplighting Negro and Indian Children Would Have Mother Katherine, formerly Miss Kate Krexel of Philadelphia, who has given her life and 7 million dollars to the work of educating and uplifting negro and Indian children, stopped off in Kansas City today from 7 to 11 o'clock, to visit St. Monica Mission, Seventeenth street and Lydia avenue. The little negro mission was filled during th—ose hours by a stream of parishioners, principally women, who called to touch the fingers of the veiled figure and receive her blessing. For Mother Katherine really is the patron saint of St. Monica Mission. Part of the Drexel millians bought the ground on which the little mission stands, and her life has been the inspiring factor in St. Monica's church and school work. Wanted to Use Street Car. Modest, retiring, self-effacing, Mother Katherine murmured a protest when a huge green motor car met her at the Union Station. She preferred to ride on the street car, she said. But her protest was overruled and the motor car carried her direct to the mission door. She wore the simple black habit of Catholic sisterhood, with nothing to distinguish her as the head of the Order of the Blessed Sacrament, which she founded. Back of her assumed humanity, however, there was a forcefulness of purpose and action that might have been characteristic of the Drexels. Concealed beneath her black hood and starched collar was a spark of energy and initiative that bespoke the power and ability to organize. A Chain of Missions. A Chain of Missions. A chain of missions in Oklahoma, Western Kansas and New Mexico testify to Mother Katherine's earnest devotion to her work the last twenty years. Her vow provides that she spend her life uplifting the aborigines. Headquarters for the Order of the Blessed Sacrament is on the Drexel estate in Philadelphia. Mother Katherine came direct from there. She was on her way to Santa Fe, N. M. Mother Katherine was accompanied by one of the sisters of the order. She is 57 years old, and has devoted thirty years to church work. She comes of a family of devout church members. Hear Miss Sutler at Allen Chapel Sunday morning. She will make your heart rejoice. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. 1916. BAPTIST INSTITUTE. The Normal Baptist Young People's Institute, under the auspices of the National B. Y. P. U. Board of which Dr. S. R. Prince is Cor. Sec. and L. Drane is Chairman will be held with St. Stephen's Baptist Young People's Union, 604-606 Charlotte Street, Kansas City, Mo. Rev. J. W. Hurse, D. D., pastor, Tuesday and Wednesday, October 3 and 4, from 2:00 to 5:00 p. m. and 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. Conducted by Rev. Daniel Payne Jones, D. D., Field Secretary of the National B. Y. P. U. Board., Official Reporter of National Baptist Convention and Agent for National Baptist Union Review. The Kansas City Conquest, Wyandotte County, Kansas, and all B. Y. P. U.'s of Kansas City and vicinity are specially invited to be present. Certificates issued to those who attend each session. Be on time; attend Bible in hand and pray for the meeting. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1916. 2:00 P. M. Devotionals. (a) Welcome address and response. (b) B. Y. P. U. Work by the conductor. (c) Bible Study. Demonstration of use of literature. (d) History of the Baptist Church. "Why I am a Baptist," Dr. G. W. Brown REV. DANIEL PAYNE JÓNES, D. D. of Chicago, Ill., who will conduct the Institute next week: "Model B. Y. P. U." by Conductor. 5:30 P. M. Offering and Benediction. 7:30 P. M. Devotionals. (a) History and object of B. Y. P. U. (b) Prayer Missions and Education at Departmental Work. Cornet Solo. Doctrinal Sermon by Rev. J. B. Beckham, Independence, Mo. Music by the famous St. Stephen's Church Choir. Offering and Benediction. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1916. 2:00 P. M. Devotionals. (a) Paper, "Mission," Mrs. M. Clark (b) Bible Study. (a) Systematic Bible Reading. Lessons of October 8 and 15, inclusive (b) Demonstration of use of liter ature. (c) Model B. Y. P. U. (b) Pastors' Conference led by the conductor Address by Prof. J. R. E. Lee of Lincoln High School. Address by Dr. J. E. Perry. Music by famous St. Stephen's Choir. Address, "Some B. Y. P. U. Don's" by Rev. Daniel Payne Jones, D. D., Conductor of Institute. Each B. Y. P. U. is requested to bring or send an offering for National Missions. A banner will be given to each B. Y. P. U. sending $5.00 or more. Honor roll to those giving $2.50 each, including literature. BE ON TIME please with your Bible in hand. NEW OFFICERS FOR WHEATLY PROVIDENT. At a special meeting of the directors of Wheatley-Provident Hospital held this week, Mr. Chester Franklin was elected to the presidency of the association and Mr. C. H. Calloway was made chairman of the house committee. Mrs. Aaron Fox becomes treasurer of the house committee and Mr. Chas. Harris a member. Mr. Harris has in charge a novel benefit entertainment at Lyric Hall to be given next month and which will be announced later in these columns. Mrs. Ella Rose, of 1514 East Tenth street, and Miss Henrietta Watkins, of Little Rock, Ark. is on an extended tour of oClorado, St. Louis and Arkansas. BRE'R ÉFE ON 'SCRIPTIONS. Sally Ann won't pay her 'scription, Still dat paper she mus' hab; Ef de newsboy falls to fetch it Den he gits a lot o' grb. When de klecter comes for money Sally always tells dat man: "Come termorrow, come nex' Monday, An' I'll hab it, ef I can." Po' ole fellow comes nex' Monday, Sally's in de same ole fix. How dat fellow runs dat paper— Dat's de compound I can't onmix. COLORED PEOPLE ENJOY A HOLIDAY. Observance of Anniversary of Eman cipation Proves Success. ELOQUENT SPEAKER HEARD Nelson C. Crews Stir Great Throng Gathered at Fair Grounds. Through the hard work of members of the committee and the liberal assistance of the press, the colored people of Terre Haute held the greatest celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation that has ever been witnessed in this vicinity. Opening with a parade six squares in length that was in every way credible and upon which much favorable comment was made, the exercises of the day were launched with a vigor that assured the success that followed. Attorney John E. Roundtree as master of ceremonies, delivered a brief but splendid address at the fair grounds in the afternoon. Miss Harriett Stuart, daughter of Prof. S. W. Stuart read the Proclamation. Speaker Stirs Crowd. Mr. Roundtree then introduced the speaker of the day, Nelson C. Crews, of Kansas City, Mo., who gave a masterly address, full of the fire and enthusiasm so characteristic of Mr. Crews and which brought forth loud applause at frequent intervals. At times Mr. Crews forced his audience, the largest colored audience that has assembled on an occasion of that kind, to tears while at other times he led them in singing some song of the olden times that brought the scenes of the slavery days vividly before the binds of the older persons present. Mr. Crews reviewed the experiences of the Negro from the time he was brought to this country through the trying days of slavery and to his emancipation. He then showed what he had accomplished since the time of his emancipation and gratefully remembered those who had had a part in assisting and helping the Negro to his present place in the world. His final plea was that the Negro be given the chance to be a man in this country and the privilege of enjoying the citizenship accorded him by the Cosstitution of the United States. The music by the Fraternity Band was the best that organization has furnished. The local committee is grateful to citizens who donated the use of their automobiles and to all who in any way assisted in making the day the great success that it was. Crowd at Night Meeting Addressing a cheering, applauding crowd of more than 2,000 people last night, Mr. Crews appealed to the colored voters of Vigo county to support Charles E. Hughes, Republican nominee for president with their ballots in the coming election. Not in years has there been such an assembly of voters at an open air night meeting, and never was enthusiasm more pronounced than was shown last night. The meeting was held in the grandstand at the fair grounds and was made of colored and white voters. In eloquent terms Mr. Crews showed the wide contrast between the administrations of Woodrow Wilson and Abraham Lincoln, depicting the noble work accomplished by the marryd President and the woeful lack of achievement, so far as it affected the Negro race, by the Wilson administration. Race discrimination has been most pronounced since the inauguration of President Wilson, Mr. Crews declared. The speaker was interrupted repeatedly by applause which many times lasted several minutes.-Terre Haute Star. The funeral of Brother J. H. Scott, will be held at Watkins Brothers Chapel, 1731 Lydia avenue, Sunday afternoon, at 2:00 o'clock. He was a member of John Lange, Lodge No. 66, K. of P. All Sir Knights are invited to be present. HISTORICAL PAGEANT. King Solomon and Queen of Sheba. A wonderful production of that historical pageant of King Solomon and Queen of Sheba was given Friday night, September 22, at Lyric Hall, under the auspices of Ezekiel Lodge No. 18, U. B. F., and Queen of Sheba Temple No. 284 S. M. T., assisted by the U. B. F. Drill team under the management of Col. Neal Range. It was a decided success from all angles. The king was represented by Brother J. W. McCuinn, of Ezekiel Lodge, and the Queen by Mrs. Irvin Harold, of Queen of Sheba Temple, each representing the character in such a pleasing manner as to win the applause of the large audience that was witnessing it. Very beautiful did the sisters and brothers as attendants look; sisters in their white dresses and purple sashes, and brothers in black suits and purple sashes marching behind the Queen and her drill team who bore Almug trees to present to the King. The Queen presented to the King "120 talents" of gold and the King presented her with a "royal bounty." A musical program was rendered to entertain the King and Queen. The Adams sisters sang a very beautiful duet. Much credit is due Mrs. Anna Roberts from whose brain this royal pageant was produced. Receipts were $66.95. LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL EXTENTION. MONTHLY FREE MUSICAL CONCERT. Sunday afternoon, 3:30 O'clock October 1, 1916. LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM. Nineteenth and Tracy. Selection, "Love's Menu (com- posed by W. H. Tyers, N. Y.) Lincoln High School Orchestra. Selection, "Barcarolle" (from The Tales of Hoffman).... ... Offenbach Lincoln High Boy's Glee club and orchestra. Piano solo, "Polonaise"..... Miss Edna Hammett. Baritone solo, Pensuit's "Bed- douin Love Song" orchestra arranged by Maj. Smith, Mr. E. R. Robinson (En costume). Ladies Chorus, "A Perfect Day"....Bond Lincoln High Girl's Glee Club. Trombone Solo, (Selected)..... Mr. Ernest Thyers. Soprano solo, "Joy Of the Morning"....Ware Mrs. Corrine Lester. Chorus Anthem, "Praise Ye the Father" .....Gouned Lincoln High School Chorus and Orchestra. Star Spangled Banner..... ...Mrs. Lester, Mr. Robinson Chorus, Orchestra and Audience J. R. E. Lee, principal. Maj. N. C. Smith, director BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH, TWEN Y-FOURTH AND FLORA. Our quarterly meeting on the 3d Sunday, was indeed a record breaker. The people came from every direction seemingly, in the afternoon. The Church was filled to its utmost capacity, many were forced to leave because there were no more room. Bethel's choir was at its best, and sang to the satisfaction of all who were present. The ministers of the various Churches of the city were present with their congregations, and enjoyed a soul stiring sermon preached by Rev. M. I. Warfield, of Kansas City, Kas. At 8:00 P. M., Rev. W. T. Nickerson, the world wide evangelist, preached a most excellent sermon, which was the beginning of a two weeks' revival meeting, and has been in progress every since with splendid results. Sunday, October 1st, we will have a great Harvest Home service at 3 P. M. This promises to be one of the greatest services of its kind ever held in Bethel. The Harvest will be placed on the altar, and will remain throughout the day. Space will not allow us to give details—be present and witness for yourself. A GOOD SHOWING AT LINCOLN SCHOOL. In the shoe repairing shop at Lincoln School over one hundred and fifty pairs of shoes were repaired last year by the pupils, the material being furnished at wholesale cost. Last year the Board of Education added a fine sewing machine to the equipment and this week a skivers machine was installed. This machine saves both labor and material. A schedule of revised prices for the various kinds of material has been sent to each patron and the pupils, under direction of Mr. Harry L. Watkins, director, are taking even greater interest in the work. The Lincoln school cafeteria, the first of such ventures among the colored schools of the city, is also growing in popularity among the patrons. Penny lunches were sold so near cost last year that out of eleven hundred dollars gross receipts only about ten dollars remained as profit at the end of the year. The menu is changed daily and seldom consists of fewer than a dozen different articles none of which is sold for more than three to five cents. The editor received an invitation to attend the banquet tendered Grand Master W W. Fields, by Moslem Temple, St. Joseph, Mo., but on account of being on a speaking tour in Indiana was unable to be present. IDEALS OF THE SUCCESS OF THE PLAIN PEOPLE. "If I did not believe that the Republican party was the party of true progress, which was prepared under its leadership to take the country along the way of adaptation to new needs and exigencies of the future, I should have no pride in representing it. But the party of Lincoln is reunited today and we cossecrate it to the ideals of Lincoln, and those ideals are permanent. These are the ideals of the success of the plain people. They are the ideals of the achievements under free institutions, of success in all the activities of the cooperative energy of the plain people."—Charles E. Hughes in a Speech Delivered at Plattsburg, N. Y. South in Saddle Now Rides the Whole Nation Nearly All the Important Committees in Both Senate and House are Controlled by the Members From the South Grand Musical Fete AT LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1916 JAMES JOHNSON and EDWARD MACKEY GREAT BLIND WONDERS To whom all musical instruments are alike will appear at the above place and date ADMISSION 25 CENTS RESERVED SEATS, 35 CENTS Under the auspices of the Lincoln High School Parent- Teachers' Association. WILLIAM H. DAWLEY, Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. MRS. F. D. GLEED, President. Washington, Sept. 16.—"The irony of fate was never so apparent as in the workings of the democratic party. Had any one been found so bold as to have ventured a prophecy that the time would come when the union soldier would see the entire government which he saved under full control of the states which attempted to destroy it, he would have been regarded a candidate for the asylum." declared Representative Simeon D. Floss of Ohio, chairman of the publicity committee of the national republican congressional committee, in a statement here today. "That time is now reached. The south rides at the head of the procession. The president and his family are southern in birth and sympathies. Control by South Absolute. "His cabinet is also southern, the five controlling heads are from states that have less than one-fifth of the population and bear less than one-nalf of the taxation. "The senate in leadership and working committees, is southern. The house, from speaker to doorkeeper, is southern. Seventeen out of eighteen great committees are headed by southern men; as follows: "Ways and Means—Kitchin, North Carolina. "Appropriations — Fitzgerald, New York. "Banking and Currency—Glass, Virginia. "Interstate and Foreign Commerce —Adamson, Georgia. "Rivers and Harbors—Sparksman Florida. "Merchant and Marine—Alexander, Missouri. "Agriculture—Layer, South Carolina. "Foreign Affairs—Flood, Virginia. "Military Affairs—Hay, Virginia. Naval Affairs—Padgett, Tennessee. "Postoffice—Moon, Tennessee "Indians—Stephens, Texas. "Insular Affairs—Jones, Virginia. "Railways and Canals—Dies, Texas. "Public Buildings—Clark, Florida. "Roads—Shackelford, Missouri. "Rules—Henry, Texas. Fix Public Policy "Here are eighteen committees whose heads represent nine states—one northern and eight southern. Of these the ways and means, judiciary banking and currency, interstate and foreign commerce, foreign atfairs, LINCOLN'S HOME. Washington. D. C.—The cabin which was Lincoln's first home, now standing on its original site near Hodgensville, Kq., became the other day the property of the Nation. A man who sees it, and later sees the completed great marble memorial to Lincoln on the bank of the Potomac at Washington, will have seen typical edifices of the most symbolic career yet known to the republic. The one is ten logs high on a side, is plastered with soil and has an outer chimney of logs, sticks and mud. The other is to cost millions, be made and adorned by artists of distinction, and become, next to Mt. Vernon, the home of Washington, the most frequented of all American civic temples. What enduring monuments these are, not only to Lincoln, but to the 10,000,000 Black men and women and children in America—it was because of the Emancipation Proclamation that Lincoln will longest be remembered. Do You Know That Advertising is the Life of Trade and the Only Real Business Getter PRICE, 5c. Will Win Now the Whole Nation Committees in Both are Controlled by the from the South merchant marine, insular affairs and rules all have to do with governmental attitude on questions of policy deter- mining. The heads of these come from southern states—North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Missouri and Texas. These states determine the govern- ment's attitude in policy. When Guard is Called. "When the country needs defense who responds? "August 1, 1916, militia on border: From New York ..... 16,000 From Massachusetts ..... 7,000 From Pennsylvania ..... 9,000 From Illinois ..... 11,000 From South Carolina ..... 3,000 From North Carolina, the home of the house leader and head of navy department..... none From Georgia, the home of the senate leader..... none From Florida, the home of the chairman of rivers and harbors, and public buildings committees..... none From Kentucky ..... none From Tennessee ..... none From Arkansas ..... none From Mississippi, the home of chairman of flood control..... none From Alabama, the home of the Underwood bill..... none Underwood bill. . . . . . . . . . none From Louisiana. . . . . . . . . . 500 House Cuts Out Loyalty. "It will be galling to the union soldiers to know that on March 1, of this year this democratic house by a vote year, this democratic house by a vote of 774 to 58 rejected the element of loyalty as essential to collect southern claims against the government arising out of the war. A motion was then made to recommit the bill with instructions to include loyalty as essential to a claim. "This was carried by a vote of 183 to 170. Every republican save one from Tennessee, and one from Virginia, voted for it. Every southern man voted against it and a few northern Democrats, including McGillcuddy, of the Second district of Maine. Vote is recorded August record page 3.877 of the present session. "The committee which has charge of these claims is under control of a member from Texas. "The south governs, appropriates and spends. "The north obeys, pays, and defends." "This is the irony of fate fifty years after. It is the meaning of Democratic control." HON. I. B. KIMBRELL, who will be the next Congressman from this district. We predict for him 6,000 majority. Musical Fete AT HIGH SCHOOL OCTOBER 2, 1916 and EDWARD MACKEY AND WONDERS All instruments are alike AFRO-AMERICAN CULLINGS When Booker Washington published his account of his own life 15 years ago, at the moment the National Negro Business league had just been launched, before the library at Tuskegee for which Carnegie partly paid had been built, and before the famous lunch with President Roosevelt, his educational work was in full tide. It is now possible to see his labors as a whole and in perspective, as well as to give him credit for many accomplishments that with natural modesty he himself attributed largely to circumstances or to others. The main facts in Booker Washington's career are well known: How he was born in a slave but in a remote part of western Virginia, a year or two before the Civil war broke out, how after the war his stepfather and mother (his father is unknown) removed to Malden, W. Vn., to work there in salt and coal mines; how, held back by his step-parent but encouraged by his mother, he learned to read and attended night school; how in 1872 he walked, begged, and worked his way to Hampton institute; and how after his graduation from Hampton, the path of opportunity opened before him when in 1881 he was appointed organizer and teacher of a new Negro normal school at Tuskegee. Many may not know that the most important day in his later career was that on which he delivered an address in 1885 at the Atlanta and Cotton States International expo­nation—one for which President Cleveland sent him a letter of thanks. A few doubtless know that the last ten years of his work were done with a body and nervous system worn out by incessant labor, so that repeatedly he was in a point of breaking down. This is told in a recent publication with all the detail which is possible in a volume of 300 pages, and in a manner not unskilled. The marshaling of facts is effective, though there is some repetition; and if the style is undistinguished and sometimes awkward, and the general paragraphs or chapters on "the times" of Washington vague and clumsily interpolated, the writer atonuses for this by the manifest enthusiasm he brings to his book. He feels, though he cannot fully express, the touch of the epic in this first great Negro leader's career. --- The steady advance of the American Negro is a conspicuous proof of the principle that progress can be had by peaceful methods. Year by year Tuskogee institute issues a "Negro Year Book" which is a sort of log of the forward movement of the race. The 1916 edition has just been issued. At the particular moment the matter is one of unusual national importance because of the new migration which is sending Negroes from the South to the northern and western states. The European war seems to be opening closed doors to the race. With the stoppage of immigration and the actual dearth of labor in some fields fresh opportunities have come to the farm workers of the South. Negroes are replacing allens from many nations. This industrial migration will doubtless have far-flung effects. If it advances sufficiently it may lessen the tension of the race problem in the South. At the same time the greater educative facilities of the North and West are likely to play a powerful part in making the southern Negro something different. Altogether the unconscious turn of More than 1,000 kinds of sausages are known in Germany. Kern county, Cal., contains 55,842 acres of proved oil lands. An enamel to glaze pottery without the use of heat is a German invention. The government of India has prohibited the importation of sulphur matches. The Russian government controls the prices charged for medical prescriptions. The Chilean government has appointed a commission to make a study of the water power available for hydroelectric development. A dredge built in Holland for the government of Uruguay crossed the Atlantic ocean under its own steam. A recently patented combined typewriter table and chair fold together to form a cover for a machine and to economize floor space. Of English invention is a new lubricant for cutting screw threads in aluminum more satisfactorily than heretofore possible. Several types of compressed air operated hoisting machines have been designed for use in places where the fire hazard is great. A machine has been perfected in Saxony that embroider designs upon three dozen pairs of stockings at once, a battery of needles making 288 stitches simultaneously. "The Telephone Rang." "And the telephone rang!" is the burden of some verses read lately, describing all the things that happened and didn't happen in consequence. The way one woman escaped wearisome trips up and downstairs in response to 'phone calls was by using a desk telephone with a very long cord. Then she took the telephone upstairs, downstairs, or on the gallery, wherever she happened to be. When the bell rang the interruption was at least close at hand. events has opened a new chapter in the history of the American Negro, a chapter more fateful than any written since the great reaction of apathy settled upon the nation after reconstruction days. Once more the Negro is becoming a vital problem. The most impressive development of the last few days so far as the Negro is concerned is the moral fatigue with which white people have viewed him. For a long time the country traveled on the moral momentum generated by the abolitionists and by the political results of the Civil war. That no longer exists. Outside of a small group of relatively dumb reformers, nobody cures seriously. Disfranchisement is an accepted principle in the South. "Jim Crow" laws no longer arouse comment. Segregation is growing. South, West and North. The most frequent feeling on the part of whites is one of helpless, hopeless acquiescence in forces which they feel unable to challenge. The old belief in equality is dormant. Orators will not admit it, no one whose political faith must be on parade can afford to admit it, but the truth is that race prejudice was never stronger. Not even the Christian brotherhood of man is a powerful enough motive to weld together different races belonging to the same religious denomination. Until the European war shut off immigration and forced American industry to summon the workers of the South segregation of all kinds appeared destined to grow greatly. The movement was from below. Largely it lacked leaders. But it swept on. The same ruthless instincts and the same moral fatigue exist today. Yet industrial necessity has brought forward new factors. In the factory, shop and construction camp another future is opening—John Vance Cheney, in the Chicago Herald. --- With commemorative exercises of dignity and eloquence the little log cabin that was Lincoln's birthplace has been set apart as a shrine. One lesson of the great life of the enamicipator, a lesson for two races and for all mankind, has been that the humblest origin need not prove a mortmain to check the will to rise. The Southern Workman tells the story of one who came "up from slavery" in an Alabama town. The father of John Guss Frazer was a freedman. The son went from the farm to town and entered the service of a tailoring establishment. He was paid 30 cents a day for errands and odd Jobs. He watched the others press clothes, and soon he had an iron in his hand and was earning a dollar. Finally he bought the business. Then, with one chair, he started a barber shop. He bought and sold cattle. He purchased a cement-block machine, made his own blocks and built a three-story building to hold the barber shop, a store, a lodge room for rental and an undertaking establishment. He built a house for himself and beside it a cottage hotel. The buildings are all of them erected on the very ground where his father once worked as a slave. Yet there are cynies who hold that a man who is born to a lowly lot in life must hold his hands in the tacit acceptance of a providential dispensation, and deny to the world the inspiring pattern of "toll unsevere from tranquility." As a mineral producer Alabama ranks first among the southern states. More than 27,000 tons of honey are produced annually by the American bee. Lightning is more frequent in Illinois and Florida than in any other states. A sanitary guard has been invented to prevent persons handling spigot outlets. Skins of the damson plums are being utilized in England to produce a blue dye. In times of peace London contains 16 embassies and legations representative of foreign countries. Pilers have been patented by an Illinois inventor to split insulation and remove it from wires neatly. As a race, the tallest people in the world are the Bororos, of the southwest of Brazil. They average six feet four inches in height. Several French lighthouses have been equipped with lenses that enable their lights to be seen from fifty to sixty miles at sea. Numerous economies are claimed for a new automobile that can be run by gasoline or electricity or a combination of the two. British aviators have found that horsehair cushions provide enough elasticity to counteract the vibration of aeroplanes and make the use of magnetic compasses possible. Value of Learning. Learning. if rightly applied, makes a young man thinking, attentive, industrious, confident, and wary; and an old man cheerful and useful. It is an ornament in prosperity, a refuge in adversity, an entertainment at all times; it cheers in solitude, and gives moderation and wisdom in all circumstances.—Palmer. Paper Umbrella. A patent for a paper umbrella has been granted to its New York inventor. THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916 In Woman's Realm Separate Skirts, in Amost Any Number of Models, Are a Feature of the Season, as Their Popularity Never Seems to Wane Two Millinery Models That Are Somewhat Different From the Ordinary. The separate skirt, like the shirt-waist, seems to return every season. Like perennial flowers, it is sure of a welcome. Among the new models for fall and winter there are many made of plaid and barred woolens, a good number in plain fabrics, and few stripes. This is simply a reaction from the all-prevailing stripes of midsum- EXCELLENT DESIGN FOR THE WORLD'S FINEST WOOL SKIRT mer. As a rule colors are subdued, by comparison with the bright and often violent color-contrasts in summer skirts. But this does not signify that they are dull. The introduction of cross bars of white or black on fabrics that show color contrasts in plaids or checks gives them life and sparkle. Pipings of a plain color, matching the cross bar, add a happy touch in the finish of their skirts. This is apparent in the skirt pictured. This model is made with the front cut on the straight of the goods and the back on the bias. Both pieces are attached to a fitted yoke cut on the straight and piped with plain white to match the cross bar. The yoke is ex- ture, would look well. branch of fine twigs wing to them, or the frond pane. An all-velvet hat at the brim of medium width crown. Everyone is far trich wreaths. The fusee used in this one slightly curled. Their stm ent gives the wreath a pearance. It looks much tiful ragged chrysanth appear along with it in terminates in two stande at the left, back of the sh apped back to back as another up while they at ostrich plumes are THE WORLD'S FINEST WOMEN T tended into a tab at each side, defined by large white pearl buttons. The waistline is slightly raised, dispensing with a belt of any kind. The skirt shown is cut to instep length, but this greatly added length is an innovation that is in the experimental stage. It detracts from the skirt both in comfort and smartness. The chances are that skirts will make some concession to the new mode as to length, but good sense will not extend them below the ankles. The shorter skirt is cleaner and better looking. trimmings for velvet are rare encore be almost unusual Use an Emp For the woman w occasional waist, an verted, is a capital wood at the bottom ing unvarnished te Two pretty rebels in the realm of fashion have successfully defied the law that hats shall be untrimmed, or almost without trimming. They are pictured here, making room for soft feathers in abundant ornaments. Then decorations, in both cases, are made of ostrich feathers. But all the feathers that grow apparently are used for the small, exquisitely made trimming that milliners are applying to hats of velvet or felt or velours. These ornaments, like those of bead and silk embroidery, and tinsel and metal braids, are flat and they cling to the shapes as if to efface themselves. But they Laces for Underwear Lace is always the fashion on underwear, but the different kinds of laces go in and out of style. At present file lace and Irish crochet are the smart laces, but the fine valenciennes laces are so beautiful they have a permanent place of their own. The edgings, insertions, and medallions are used alone or with hand embroidery, the latter, of course, adding incalculably to the loveliness and value of the underwear. In evening underwear ribbons, buds, chiffon flowers and are too brilliant to be lost sight of. The hilt at the left of the picture has a crown of velvet and a brim of felt. It is one of many two-color shapes. There are various color combinations, and occasionally a light and a dark shade of one color are combined in this way. On almost any of them a spray of fancy ostrich, like that in the pic OR SEPARATE SKIRT. ture, would look well. It resembles a branch of fine twigs with snow clinging to them, or the frost on a window pane. An all-velvet hat at the right has a brim of medium width and a soft crown. Everyone is familiar with ostrich wreaths. The fuses of the feathers used in this one are long and slightly curled. Their scanty arrangement gives the wreath a flowerlike appearance. It looks much like the beautiful ragged chrysanthemums which appear along with it in the fall. It terminates in two standing half plumes at the left, back of the shape. These are placed back to back as if to brace one another up while they still maintain that ostrich plumes are the best of 1 trimmings for velvet hats. Even so they are rare enough this season to be almost unusual Julia Bottomly Use an Empty Drawer. For the woman who must press an occasional waist, an empty drawer, inverted, is a capital ironing board. The wood at the bottom of the drawer, being unvarnished, tells no tales of the use to which it has been put. Where a writing desk is lacking, an empty drawer, inverted and then partly replaced, furnishes a roomy flat space for writing materials. The second drawer of the average bureau is about the right height for this purpose. Girdles of Silk Brocaded silk for girdles and other trimming is in demand. It gives the same sort of touch of color that embroidery does, if skillfully used, and, of course, it is far less work to tuck in a bit of brocade than it is to embroider even a simple pattern by hand. pale colored satin ribbons make the lingerie so fascinating that it seems a crime to cover it with a dress. Sailor Bands Match Dress The mannish sailor is observed in many instances and varieties, although the canotier shape, with a slightly drooping, wide brim, was seen in larger numbers. The most interesting note about the sailors is the band, wide or narrow, according to the fancy of the owner, but made of the same material as the dress. PITTSBURGH ON EDGE OF ASIA In Baku Persian and Tartar Millionaires Ride in Jeweled Cars. I'm afraid that I shall have to tell my great-grandchildren that the Caspian is very little to look at, at least from Baku, writes H. G. Dwight in the Century. It has no color and it smells outrageously of kerosene. Baku, however, is something to look at. (Baku is the Russian trans-Caucasian seaport on the Caspian sea.) It is a kind of Pittsburgh dipped in Asia, and it tickled me beyond measure. Not so long ago it was a wretched fishing village inhabited chiefly by Persians and Tartars, who were too stupid to sell their land to prowling oil prospectors. So those same Persians and Tartars now roll in gold. And they don't know what on earth to do with it. The consequence is that nobody but a millionaire can afford to live in Baku. But what a fantastic hedgepodge of civilization and barbarism! What types! What costumes! What morals! Above all, what motor cars—satin lined, emblazoned, gilded, jeweled, skithering there on the edge of Asia. It's too good to be true, but I shan't tell you about it. What I want to tell you about is a park the Russians have made there on the shore of their Caspian. They always do those things well, you know. No green thing will grow for miles around Baku, but those Russians have coaxed a few trees to sprout in tubs in that tidy little park, and bands far better than I ever heard in Central park play you Tschankowsky and Rimsky-Korsakof, not to say Wagner and Verdi and Bizet. And you should see the extraordinary crowds that listen—the Russians, the Persians, the Armenians, the Georgians, the Lesghians, the Tartars, the wild, the swarthy, the fiery, the rainbow colored! My son, when in doubt, go to Baku. I sat there in the park one afternoon, sniffing their Caspian, tapping my foot in time to their "Glinka," when I suddenly made a discovery: That coon song we used to sing when we were young, "Lou, Lou, I Love You," came out of "Life for the Czar." War Prices in Paris One hears a great deal about the rising cost of living in Germany, resulting from the British blockade, but comparatively little about the privations of the allies. The following letter from an American engineer in Paris tells something of the hardships of the City of Light: "Cold boiled ham costs ninety-five cents a pound and each thin slice comes to ten cents. Butter is unreatable at less than sixty-four cents a pound, and everything is in proportion. Gasoline is twenty cents a quart. Alcohol is out of the question, as it is now forty-eight cents a quart as compared to fourteen before the war. Sugar is fourteen cents a pound. "I believe the war won't be over before next year, so we settle down to it as a fact to be borne. It hits everyone except a few. I am comfortable, have enough to eat and a good bed, but living in 'juste' (narrow); I just about come out even."—Wall Street Journal. Caressed the Wrong Hand The Broad Ripple car was crowded and she and her young man were standing just inside the rear door. She leaned against the young man and he held to the door which served as a support for the conductor also. She reached over and patted a hand—the conductor's hand. Passengers on the rear platform smiled. The conductor winked and squeezed her hand. Block after block the caresses continued. She looked contentedly up at her young man—and he didn't know what he was missing nor what the rear platform passengers were laughing about. Neither did she.—Indianapolis News. Pink for a Baby Girl Why pink for a baby girl and blue for the boy? The reason for the distinction is not very clear. We are told that in Russia and in America blue is used in the preparation of the outfit for a baby if the parents desire a boy and pink if the preference is for a girl, and then the old stork brings just whichever one he pleases regardless of the color scheme; so the wise mother uses both pink and blue in her layette. A Russian maiden not only wears pink in her girlhood, but adorns her wedding trousseau plentifully with this hue. Blunt Insinuation: A fashionable painter, noted for his proscale output, was discussing at a studio tea in New York a recent scandal in the picture trade. "Look here, old man," said a noted etcher, "do you paint all your own pictures?" "I do," the other answered hotly, "and with my own hands, too." "And what do you pay your hands?" the etcher inquired. "I'm thinking of starting an art factory myself." New Discovery. Margaret, aged eleven, had just returned from her first visit to the zoo. "Well," said her mother, smiling, "did you see the elephants and the giraffe and the kangaroo?" Margaret looked thoughtful. "We saw the elephant and the giraffe and the dang-ger-roos." "What?" said Mrs. Blank. "The dang-ger-roos. It said 'these animals are D-a-u-g-e-r-o-u-s.'" Nothing Doing. Anxious Mother—Your lips are awfully red, my dear. I hope that young man who just left didn't— Pretty Daughter (interrupting)—No, of course he didn't. If my lips are red it because he made me so angry I bit them. Anxious Mother—Did you get angry because he tried to kiss you? Pretty Daughter—No; because he didn't. Different System. "My wife constantly pesters me for money. Does yours?" "No; the people she buys things from do that."-Boston Transcript. NEWS and GOSSIP OF WASHINGTON How Washington's "Morse Elm" Received Its Name WASHINGTON.—The most interesting of all the old trees in the capital is the huge old elm which stands at the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street in front of what used to be the old Willard hotel. Many years ago, this tree the popul years ago this was the popular resort of the nation's statesmen, who were wont to assemble beneath its shade, tilt their chairs against its trunk and spin many historic yarns, punctuated by well-aimed salvos of tobacco juice. Here, also, came the newspaper correspondents from newspaper row, just above the hotel on Fourteenth street, and heard the latest political achievements discussed with careless informality. One day when the tree was sheltering an unusually large assembly of notables, and asked them to congratulate him on his good said, in inventing an instrument by which people to Washington. It is to be regretted that our learned Ameri men received the statement as a huge joke, and the amiable inventor could retrieve his reputa them all to drinks. It was not until a few wee an appropriation for Dr. Samuel F. B. Morse telegraph line from Baltimore to Washington the their error and the fact that they had entertained that time the tree has been known as the Mors Golf Helps President Wilson t GOLF is credited by President Wilson with m knotty international problems, handling of thousand and one things a busy president mus was she- remily of notables, gave him on his good- ment by which people our learned Ameri- sus a huge joke, and retrieve his reputation not until a few wee- Samuel F. B. Morsse, e to Washington the they had entertained known as the Morsse Sent Wilson to Sent Wilson with m meems, handling of ousy president mus of notables, a familiar figure joined them on his good luck. He had succeeded, he which people could talk from Baltimore learned American statesmen and newspaper joke, and suggested that the only way his reputation for sanity was to treat a few weeks later when congress made B. Morse to continue his work on a washington that the tree gatherers learned and entertained a genius unawares. Since was the Morse elm. Wilson to Solve Problems Wilson with making possible the solving of handling of Mexican affairs and all the resident must do. By golf he rests his tering an unusually large assembly of notables, a familiar figure joined them and asked them to congratulate him on his good luck. He had succeeded, he said, in inventing an instrument by which people could talk from Baltimore to Washington. It is to be regretted that our learned American statesmen and newspaper men received the statement as a huge joke, and suggested that the only way the amiable inventor could retrieve his reputation for sanity was to treat them all to drinks. It was not until a few weeks later when congress made an appropriation for Dr. Samuel F. B. Morse to continue his work on a telegraph line from Baltimore to Washington that the tree gatherers learned their error and the fact that they had entertained a genius unawares. Since that time the tree has been known as the Morse elm. Golf Helps President Wilson to Solve Problems GOLF is credited by President Wilson with making possible the solving of knotty international problems, handling of Mexican affairs and all the thousand and one things a busy president must do. By golf he rests his mind so thoroughly he can think clearly and act intelligently during working hours. R President Wilson has one of the finest sets of golf sticks in the country. They were made for him in England by a professional and given to him by his brother, John A. Wilson, of Franklin, Pa. also gave hold not only the 15 clubs, but a rubber coat and takes with him when he golfs. The president's golf game is characterized by plays what is known as a "short game," taking tance another player might attempt in one. T putting. He is steady and accurate. President Wilson's definition of golf may be says: "Golf is an ineffectual attempt to put an hole with uncontrollable instruments." Most of the president's golfing is done at the across the river in Virginia. This is a small club ment officials, people from the Smithsonian in bureaus. There are no social features; it is exch. Players at the club have learned to treat the treated—as merely another member of the club consideration or courtesies. He is always trailed. The president always takes the caddies a caddie 35 cents, the customary charge for 18 hole Rookies Must Be Taught to THE training of raw recruits is a perpetual circ. Third infantry went from Washington over to National Guardsm and new recruits are in hold not only the 15 clubs, but a rubber coat and hat the president always takes with him when he golfs. but a rubber coat a e is characterized short game," taking attempt in one. accurate. dation of golf may be attempt to put an arruments." olfing is done at the This is a small clu the Smithsonian in features; it is exce learned to treat the member of the clu life is always trail kakes the caddies a y charge for 18 hrs Taught to is a perpetual circ Washington over to recruits are in o rubber coat and hat the president always characterized by steadiness and care. He name," taking two shots to cover a disst in one. The president's long suit is golf may be new to some people. He not to put an elusive ball into an obscure s is done at the Washington Country club, a small club made up mostly of govern- nisonian institution and the scientific ; it is exclusively golf. to treat the president as he likes to be of the club. He is shown no special always trailed by the secret service men. caddies as they come and pays the te for 18 holes. right to Deliver Messages perpetual circus. Col. G. B. Young of the ington over to the Radio camp, where the uits are in camp. His automobile got The president's golf game is characterized by steadiness and care. He plays what is known as a "short game," taking two shots to cover a distance another player might attempt in one. The president's long suit is putting. He is steady and accurate. President Wilson's definition of golf may be new to some people. He says: "Golf is an ineffectual attempt to put an elusive ball into an obscure hole with uncontrollable instruments." Most of the president's golfing is done at the Washington Country club, across the river in Virginia. This is a small club made up mostly of government officials, people from the Smithsonian institution and the scientific burenus. There are no social features; it is exclusively golf. Players at the club have learned to treat the president as he likes to be treated—as merely another member of the club. He is shown no special consideration or courtesies. He is always trailed by the secret service men. The president always takes the caddies as they come and pays the caddie 35 cents, the customary charge for 18 holes. Rookies Must Be Taught to Deliver Messages THE training of raw recruits is a perpetual circus. Col. G. B. Young of the Third infantry went from Washington over to the Radio camp, where the National Guardsmen and new recruits are in camp. His automobile got stuck in the machine and the infantry stuck in the mud, and a passing rookie, who looked like a soldier, was hailed by the colonel, and told to send some men down to help get his machine out of the mud, and this is the way Colonel Young told him to deliver the message: "The colonel of the regiment presents his compliments to the officer of the guard and requests that a detail of the guard be sent to help an automobile out of the mud." The rookie, of course, hastened to the guard tent, saluted slouchily, and this is a message: "A man up there wants a bunch of you men mud." Lieut. Col. Anton Stephan, who heard both devised a scheme for training the men in the time during the night different men on guard guards repeat it to the corporal of the guard; the and the sergeant carries the news to the lieuten received and as sent is compared. Congress May Really Curtail SOMETIME, perhaps during the next session of loved institution, "the leave to print," under send, postage free, to their constituents tons of im the guard tent, saluted slouchily, and this is the way he delivered the message: needed to chilly, and this is a bunch of you men who heard both the men in the re- cent men on guard of the guard; the news to the lieuten- ant. Rally Curtail the next session o e to print," under institutions tons of in and this is the way he delivered the of you men to get an auto out of the heard both ends of the message, has seen in the repeating of messages. Some on guard are given a message, the guard; the corporal tells the sergeant to the lieutenant. Then the message as Curtail "Leave to Print" ext session of congress, that dearly be- nt," under which congressmen annually is tons of imaginary speeches they never "A man up there wants a bunch of you men to get an auto out of the mud." Lieut. Col. Anton Stephan, who heard both ends of the message, has devised a scheme for training the men in the repeating of messages. Some time during the night different men on guard are given a message, the guards repeat it to the corporal of the guard; the corporal tells the sergeant and the sergeant carries the news to the lieutenant. Then the message as received and as sent is compared. Congress May Really Curtail "Leave to Print" SOMETIME, perhaps during the next session of congress, that dearly beloved institution, "the leave to print," under which congressmen annually send, postage free, to their constituents tons of imaginary speeches they never made—liberally sprinkled with mythical "laughter" and psychological "applause"—may be curtailed. A bipartisan report from the joint printing committee urges these facts in favor of the bill: WY GENTLE-MEN, ITS PREPOSTEROUS THIS CUTTIN' OUT TH'LEAVE TUH PRINT — WAT WILL SENATOR MANAGER DO? WAT WILL CONGRESSMAN MUM DO? — WATLL I DO? - - - - A million volumes a year, many printed on fine paper and bound in leather, have to be sold as waste paper because no one takes the trouble to frank them out. Janitors and building superintendents complain that whole basements paper, so that the government has to d wood. ents comp are literally filled with virtual waste paper, so they rent additional space to store coal and wood. Private manufacturing firms, acting in collusion, have had printed and franked at public exhibitions of their plants, factories and industries. The new bill provides for cutting down of d of which are, by law, required to be printed now and house committees must examine every document print. To prevent possible suppression of reports printed it is provided the houses may override co VERY RARE. "Is it true," asked the chiropiodist's patient, "t wearing shoes that are too large as well as from a "Theoretically, I've no doubt it is true," repli in all my twenty years' experience I've never yet POOR JOHN. "John, dear, I'm afraid you are worrying too business of yours." waste complain that whole basements are literally filled with virtual waste paper, so that the government has to rent additional space to store coal and wood. Private manufacturing firms, acting in collusion with senators and members, have had printed and franked at public expense "puffs"—virtual advertisements of their plants, factories and industries. The new bill provides for cutting down of departmental documents, all of which are, by law, required to be printed now, and provides that senate and house committees must examine every document which it is proposed to print. To prevent possible suppression of reports which the senate may wish printed it is provided the houses may override committee action, or inaction. ing in collusion with senators and mem- public expense "puffs"—virtual adver- d industries. down of departmental documents, all printed now, and provides that senate every document which it is proposed to of reports which the senate may wish override committee action, or inaction. RARE. is patient, "that one can get corns from well as from wearing tight ones?" is true," replied the foot specialist, "but never yet seen a case of that kind." JOHN. worrying too much about that horrid old Private manufacturing firms, acting in collusion with senators and members, have had printed and franked at public expense "puffs"—virtual advertisements of their plants, factories and industries. The new bill provides for cutting down of departmental documents, all of which are, by law, required to be printed now, and provides that senate and house committees must examine every document which it is proposed to print. To prevent possible suppression of reports which the senate may wish printed it is provided the houses may override committee action, or inaction. VERY RARE. "Is it true," asked the chiropodist's patient, "that one can get corn from wearing shoes that are too large as well as from wearing tight ones?" "Theoretically, I've no doubt it is true," replied the foot specialist, "but in all my twenty years' experience I've never yet seen a case of that kind." POOR JOHN. "John, dear, I'm afraid you are worrying too much about that horrid old business of yours." "Don't worry about me, dear. I'm all right." "No, John, you are not all right. Last night when you came home from that dreadfully late directors' meeting you were so absent-minded that you put your hat under your pillow and tried to hang your watch on the clothes tree." EASY READING. "What have you there?" "The memoirs of a famous baseball pitcher." "Easy reading. I dare say." "The easiest ever. Nearly 400 pages without reference or quotation from the classics." s baseball pitcher. " 400 pages without e classics." "The easiest ever. Nearly 400 pages without a single footnote, historical reference or quotation from the classics." WILLIAM HARRIS They are longer clubs than used by the average player, each having more than a 40-inch shaft. His brother also gave him a double-heel boots. THERE'S A GUY WANTS YUM TO— feat eee ea i Neate ac gg ce a errr an mca musomuiecenaruems ens) eh Wall PAV hime iat IN : Fri eae PAL eect SEE ae» N PEE He ca 4 : Hera eel wae Bee oo Eiith. n is eat ee ee Tae Bec he Tr Batra tree tie eat i ta Fa] ll Been ue ne Ea cs Ss | | A | AT GEL sri ee ig eee a ae Re tue Lies otto 3 Res aaa ee aoe “ 9, }7 Cranks and “Bugs” Infest Gotham’s City Hall N= YORK.—As the flame attracts the moth, so does city hall attract cranks and “bugs and “nuts"—more than any other spot on earth, But Rone of them can get by Lieut. “BI” Kennel, the big cop who guards that i fice. "A soft answor turneth away ‘ Loaneo 3 GH) Grip wrath,” quotes “BM,” meaning there- MAYOR AMILUON, ‘eye | by that with the average crank, man To sart a WG $5) or woman, who comes to see the Ay gs mayor about Fenting elty hall or sell Mur cron TH QL ing bin @ charms for several none Apoaie-r0 4 whereby his mayoralty chair is insured Churn ( to him forever—some of the actual intenest— SS P things that have happened in the past Bias RUN LINE Ghateas ea rica she eotitasie ee not as many of them in these days as years ago,” says “Bill.” “Nowadays they write letters, Recently a fellow called around to give the mayor a solution for the problem of the unemployed. ‘Judge Gary,’ he said, ‘doesn't know anything about the game’—it will be recalled that Mr. Gary was head of the mayor's committee on employment—and I want to give him the real solution.’ “<The mayor is very busy today, I told him. ‘But if you tell me your scheme I'll be glad to inform him. ‘Well, you see, it's this way,’ sald the caller. ‘You know, I own the munfeipal building and I don't like its archi- tecture. So I propose to tear it down. ‘That will give employment to thou- sands, Of course, I will rebuild it, But in the meantime thousands of men, working four shifts a day, will have a Job. Five dollars a day to each, Send me the bill.” And he walked off. “Then there 1s a bearded Russian who wears sandals and linen clothes who drops into the city hall every so often to interest the mayor In his ‘buck-to-nature’ cult, ‘Iam a real descendant of Adam,’ he says, “and when we get our Garden of Paradise none of us will wear clothes. I'm sure the mayor would give me a milllon—he owes it to me—if I could see him, so that could buy the place’ “He's trying to raise that million,” says “Bill,” every time the baek-to-nature man appears. ‘The walking bugs—that {s, the fellows who start to walk from New York to San Francisco or arotind the world—are the real pests of city hall, ‘They ull want a letter from the mayor, or to have thelr records vised. More than once has “Bill” rolled down the steps in his fight with a crank. Memphis Preparing to Dedicate Immense Bridge ASE 'TENN.—Almost on the spot where De Soto stood when he first gazed upon the Father of Waters rests the eastern pier of the great Harahan bridge that spans the Mississippi river, connecting Tennessee. and Arkansas, The bridge, with its ap- Pronclies, ts three miles tong, has cost $8,000,000 and will be fully completed this winter and formally dedicated » next April. It will have required NEE three years and a half to build, In its as construction 23,000 tons of steel are SS Co 3 uae ate SOY he spans over therchannel of the ERE “TRA river total one mile, while on the Ar- ——EeB\aW\R Ty f Tantat se thee ae tee mites ot SANS SB at) steel and stone construction over the “=e AQV AU’ * oN low river bank district. The bridge is 55 feet above the highest water ever known. This will permit steamboats to pass under it at high water without passing through a‘draw. "When the river is at extremely low stage the upper works of the bridge tower almost 150 fect above the surface of the river, ‘Two railrond tracks cross the bridge, besides a spacious driveway for ‘wagons and automobiles, and sidewalks for foot passengers. Wagon and foot traffic will pass free of charge. . "The celebration of the completion of the bridge, which will be held next April, ‘will be the occasion of the greatest pageant ever held In this part of the Mississipp{ valley. Assurances have been secured from the navy depart- | tent that battleships, submarines and other vessels will pagticlpate in the Colebration, Among the cratt will be floats of historteal character, and the fact that the Memphis pler rests on or near the spot where De Soto discovered the river will be made the basis of a celebration in honor of the great Spaniard. se : i : : Old Men’s Workshop Is Unique New York Charity NEW YORK—The ota Man's workshop, conducted by the New York associ- ation for improving the condition of the poor, is giving respectable, elderly men a chance to remain self-supporting and an opportunity to pass the evenings of their lives in something S else beside idle and eventless days. ZS=Z Another purpose of the workshop is to b A Aly provide light work for men tempo- A>, Od rarily handicapped by sickness until Pee VIKS& they can go back to a man's full- GN. <3 ”) fledged Job. The working capacity of laden re arf none of these men {s great and_their co (-Z tasks must be comparatively easy. ca < ‘As a result, the workshop schedule v LY calls for six hours a day and the “- . minimum wage paid {s about 60 cents | shop during the year 1s about 70, running as high as 100 in the winter and Groping to 40 in the summer, as many of the men are able to secure some kind of ight out-of-door work during the latter perlod, ‘The association makes an effort to get them such, using the shop only as @ last resort when | nothing else can be found for them, ‘At the present time the shop is especially busy turning out toys which are being sent into all of the hospitals and the homes where children are suffering from infantile paralysis, ‘They are also being sent to children who, while free from the disease, have been quarantined in thelr homes because Of the removal of some meniber of the family to a hospital. Little Snake Causes Quakes in the Quaker City PFULADELPHIA—When a 121nch snake wrigeled Its way across Chestnut street near Twelfth the other afternoon toward the curbstone scores of men and women looked, stopped and then edged away as the reptile ap- proached nearer, Several exception- ; ally timid women fled, terror-stricken, : apace oe Goan ane waa oct && an everyday oceurrence, Finally group of men, braver than thelr fellows, formed a circle C@aSo- around the snake, ' It lifted its head Se ‘once, wiggled ita tall and the crowd ? ‘broke for cover, A reserve policeman ost, appronched, took a look and advised \\\( ‘the bystanders to move away. ‘i SO eee “That's 9 rattlesnake,” he sald. “I = = eer En oe aoe ae ieee eae wagon.” As he departed a man approached who has known snakes all his Ufe. To the astonishment of the spectators he bent down, picked up the snake and walked away. He had recognized It as a “De Kay garter” snake, the smallest of North American species and one of a harmless variety. It 1s believed that the snake crawled into an automobile in some out-of-town, garage and dropped to the street upon its arrival in the city, QUITE AMENABLE, “This Texas capitalist says he is going to show those New Yorkers a ‘thing or two,” “Well, {¢ one of the things he shows them is his bank roll, they won't object."—Birmingham Age-Herald, NOT FAR WRONG. “A-u-to-cra-cy,” spelled Tommy, reading aloud, After a pause, he “pronounced 1% triumphantly, “Autocrazy.”” And he wondered why his father laughed. AT HER WORST. Damsel (hard at work at the plano)—TI sing my best when he {s neat, Rude man (in a tragic whisper as he turas over the music)—He can’ sbave urrived yet! Damsel (hard at work at the plano)—I sing my best when he is near. Rude man (in a tragic whisper as he turos over the music)—He can' ebave arrived yet! eee page ee cea ee eA ee fice. “A soft answer turneth away wrath,” quotes “Bill,” meaning there- by that with the average crank, man or woman, who comes to see the mayor about renting city hall or sell- ing him a charm for several millions whereby his mayoralty chalr is insured to him forever—some of the actual things that have happened in the past =the best way to handle them ts the easiest way. ‘Then you get thelr con- Riandk and tule aca we Wa Gate SQ Baw eS SO ae ap tee O_O o-} Br is = ZARA ey Fe GE r known. This will permit steamboats t passing through a draw. When the per works of the bridge tower almost idge, besides a spacious driveway for s for foot passengers, Wagon and foot of the bridge, which will be held next test pageant ever held In this part of ve been secured from the navy depart- 1 other vessels will pagticipate in the floats of historical character, and the near the spot where De Soto discovered a celebration in honor of the great Unique New York Charity op, conducted by the New York associ- f the poor, is giving respectable, elderly ting and an opportunity to pass the evenings of thelr lives in something else beside idle and eventless days. Another purpose of the workshop is to provide light work for men tempo- rarily handicapped by sickness until they can go back to a man's full- fledged job. The working capacity of none of these men {s great and_thelr tasks must be comparatively easy. As a result, the workshop schedule calls for six hours a day and the minimum wage paid is about 60 cents a day. The average attendance at the ning as high as 100 in the winter and ly of the men are able to secure some g the latter period. The association ng the shop only as a last resort when specially busy turning out toys which uls and the homes where children are ey are also being sent to children who, mn quarantined in their homes because » family to a hospital, akes in the Quaker City make wriggled its way across Chestnut ernoon toward the curbstone scores ot | then edged away as the reptile ap- g S : 4 ost | yl yf ae >= SS roached who has known snakes all his ectators he bent down, picked up the ognized it as a “De Kay garter” snake, 8 and one of a harmless variety, It 1s 0 an automobile in some out-of-town ) its arrival in the city, : MENABLE, 8 going to show those New Yorkers a ows them is his bank roll, they won't R WRONG, y, ending aloud, After a pause, he razy.” laughed, enespnennneinsennennentenssehsbsiljestenenenereneeenenttnsttiennceeoninstne ee MILES OF OCEAN BOTTOM SEARCHED |< Bessy oo is Gr 2 five miles, they will continue the Big’, Diver Tells of Difficulty in Lopate for five ‘tiles, further 4 the ee it reasure sume directions, If she is not found re ing Wreck of Tre Steere str cones sei eae || gn Ship. that the senrel will be abandoned un | - til next spring. | ¥ ea The expedition Is a costly one. ‘The CASH AND SILVER BULLION | atvers are pata as nigh ax $10 a day. | | ne It 1s said that Captain Stillson will re- } celve a big bonus If the expedition is WAX A success, and “fair” compensation it ay Other Wrecks Are Found by Treasure: |i¢ fitig, | | Hunting Crew, One of Them Ap- In marine cireles It Is belleved that HY 4 parently Being That of the Merida will not be found, It 1s AN 4 a Steamer. Based that io tho Bie Sones clave cha ; Norfolk, Va.—Searching for a sunken ship on which there is over $1,000,000 in money and silver bullion, the treas- ure-hunting crew of 84 men under the command of Capt. George Stillson, a master diver, inventor and expert in submarine engineering, is not proving an easy task, Stillson says. ‘The treasure-Inden ship 1s, or was, the Ward line steamer Merida. She was sunk in the summer of 1911 about fifty-five miles off Cape Charles Light- ship when she vas rammed by the freight steamer Admiral Farragut. ‘The Merida carried over 300 passen- gers, all of whom were taken off by the Farragut and transferred to the Old Dominion steamer Hamilton, which landed them in Norfolk. Among the passengers were a num- ber of Americans fleeing from Mexico. ‘They had with them the savings of thelr lifetimes and these savings they say, were locked in the safe in the office of the purser of the Merida. ‘When the steamer was struck the wa- ter poured through the hole in her starboard side so fast that they did not have time to save any of thelr valuables. ‘The Merida also carried silver bull- fon sald to have been worth over $000,- 000. ‘The purser’s safe {s filled with money and jewelry. The vessel's car- go was fruit. ‘Treasure-Hunting Fleet. ‘The treasure-hunting’ fleet 1s com- posed of the yacht J. H. Beckwith, the trawler Fearless and a barge used by divers, ‘There are about a dozen divers in the outfit, including F. Nill- son, who Is said to have been the first to exploré the bottom of the Atlantic near where the Merida went down. Capt. C. Hermanson, who Is in com- mand of the flagship of the fleet, is of the opinion that if the Merida 1s found she will be some miles away from the spot where she went down, Divers have explored two miles of the Atlantic ocean, It Is stated, and have found several wrecks, one o! them apparently a steamer, but it was not the one they sought, Divers sent up portions of a deckhouse of the steamer. There was nothing of valu In the wreck. Captain Stillson says he has no! given up hope of finding the Merids and is not disappointed at not finding the vessel at the point where she wen! down. “A vessel seldom goes right straigh to the bottom when she sinks,” he says, “especially where the water I deep and the currents strong.” It i possible that the Merida is ten mile: away from the spot whereshe wen! ‘down. Under currents sometimes car ry # vessel miles away before she set tles on the bottom. And after she strikes the bottom, shifting sand: sometimes carry & vessel severa miles. Captain Hermanson also is of the opinion that the Merida will be found and the divers, too, are confident. The men tell. of encounterins strange-looking objects under water of stumbling against a sunken vessel or meeting a shark face to face. Search Is Thorough. After searching five miles in ons direction, the treasure hunters will re turn to the spot where the Merlds went down and search five miles tr another direction, After they have gone north, south, each and west foi LEADER ue INDIAN TROOPS Ais \ Ay iT 4 K : B . ic Taney Sir Pertab Singh is one of Britain's most loyal colonial sons. He is an In- dian of highest birth and is in com- }mand of the Indian forces fighting for the allies on the western front. ner GIRL IS EXPERT CARPENTER Young Lady Makes About All the Furniture Needed in the Household. f Alameda, Cal.—When anything 1s needed in the furniture line in the von Manderscheld home in Alameda, they call in Plorita and say : “Bather needs a shaving cabinet,” oF “Mother needs a mahogany bedroom set," or “Little sister needs a high ebalr.” five miles, they will continue the search for five thiles further in the sume directions. If she is not found before winter comes on it is probable that the search will be abandoned un- til next spring. ‘The expedition Is a costly one. The divers are paid as high ax $10 # day. It ts said that Captatn Stilison will re- ceive a big bonus If the expedition is A success, and “fair” compensation if It falls, In marine circles tt Is believed that ‘the Merida will not be found. It is ‘figured that in the five years since she went down she is probably completely covered by sands, and divers might walk over the spot where sho lies without knowing it. ‘The treasure hunters come to Nor- folk and Newport News about every two weeks to take on fuel and sup- plies, $20 REWARD FOR $400 RING Honest Waitress Found It and Re- turned Jewel to Mrs. ‘Whitworth. Colorado Springs, Colo—Luck was with Mrs, Rose Whitworth, wife of a ‘Tulsa (Okla) business man, when she dropped a diamond setting from her rings In the McRae cafe, ‘The gem weighs two karats and ts valued at $400. It slipped from. the owner's hand while she was at lunch. ‘Three hours tater she returned, having missed the Jewel, and Billy Jones, man- ager, was able to return her diumond by reason of the honesty of the walt- ress, who found it on the floor. ‘The waltress 1s richer by $20 and ‘Mrs. Whitworth is happy, the diamond having been a prenuptial gift from her ‘husband. GOLD IN CHICKENS’ CROPS Auburn, Cal-—Thiomas Gam- Un of the Mount Vernon district has some very yaluable chick- ens. Recently hesgilled two and found gold nuggets in thelr craws valued at about one dol- lar. 8 the chickens were penned sna eM spaces the Mise Gamlin immediately began in- vestigations and soon unearthed a quartz ledge which he will further prospect. Cyrus W. Field’s Faith in Ocean Telegraphs Was Justified in 1866. EARLY PROJECTS FAILURES Since July 27, 1866, New World Has Been in Continuous Communica- tion With Old by Subma- rine Cable. | New York.—It is a little more than ‘a half century since the completion of the first permanent Atlantic telegraph, ‘observes the New York Evening World. ‘Since July 27, 1866, the new world has Been in continuous and uninterrupted communteation with the old world by means of the submarine cable. ‘The final success was achieved only after several disheartening failures, As early as 1843 Prof. Samuel F. B. Morse suggested the possibility of an Atlantic telegraph line, Just a decade later Cyrus W. Field, a wealthy merchant, became interested In a plan for Inying an underground cable across Newfoundland and in the following year, 1851, he secured the co- operation of Peter Cooper, Moses Tay lor and others in a scheme for a trans- Atlantic cable. ‘The manufacture of 2,500 miles of wire was completed in 1857 and the task of laying {t was com- menced at Valentia, Ireland, in August of that year, two American and two British vessels belng engaged. After a few miles had bee laid the cable snapped. This was repaired, but after 800 miles of wire had been put down {t snapped again and the vessels re- turned to Plymouth. Success Short Lived. @ Sorm caused (ne failure of 8 second attempt, but the third voyage, in 1858, was successful, and the June- tion between the two continents was effected by 2,059 miles of wire streteh- ing from the Irish coast to Newfound- land. Messages were exchanged be- tween Queen Victoria and President Buchanan and there was great rejoic- ing on both sides of the ocean, ‘The Jubilation proved premature however, for in a short time the cable ceased to work and was branded a fail- ure, ‘The faith of Field did not waver, and, although the Civil war prevented an early revival of the project, in 1805 a new company began the laying of another cable, ‘The famous vessel, the Great Eastern, was dispatched to Ire- land with the. wire, but again the project ended in failure. ‘Mr. Field then launched the Anglo- American Telegraph company, and in July, 1886, the Great Bastern steamed Florita goes out to her workshop and with hammer, saw and chigel the need 1s supplied and the family hasn’t paid out a cent except for the lumber, Miss Florita von Mandescheld is an expert carpenter and Joiner. She takes to tools as the ordinary girl takes to curling trons. She has been hammer- ing away for several years now, and has never so much as knocked the beauty parlor finish off her thumb nail, She made a mahogany library table of such craftsmanship that Principal George C. Thompson of the Alameda STRANGE FRENCH AIRCRAFT CX. a, Be Ss; wo Gye Neo li \ a Wd | \ \\ ” e \{ | eee ss suegsste pots Rte uate a0 ied jth ie a ae ‘The censor has permitted the publl- cation of this photograph of a French war balloon, edlled a “sansnge” at ths front. ‘This strange-looking alreruft Is used for observation purposes, mall Mosman Gomean Fort Wayne, Ind.—Surgeons suc- cessfully operated the other day on Pete Annastropfe, an Assyrian, to re- move a bullet that tnd lodged between vertebrae in his neck when he was shot in the mouth at Van Wert, O., some weeks ago, and Annastropfe will recover, the surgeons suid, after having been constantly in danger throughout the five weeks. ‘The position of the bullet was such, it was sald, that had Annastropfe moved his head violently he would have died. ‘The bullet was touching the spinal cord and the op- eration was regarded as extremely serious. Rn away from Valentia laying another cable. July 27 the cable was complete- ly Intd at Heart's Content, Newfound- land, and the queen and the president ‘again exchanged greetings. Soon after this happy event the lost cable of 1865 was recovered and pliced In service. In addition to the cables between Va- lentia and Heart's Content, Newfound- land, there are now cable nes between Waterville, Ireland, and Canso, N. 8.5 New York’ and Rockport, Mass.; Ben- zance, England, and Bay Roberts, N. F.; Canso, N. 8, and New York; Bal Unskellig’s Bay, Ireland, and Halifax, N.S. and Rye Beach, N. H., and Brest. France, and Cape Cod, Mass, roan HALTS THE FUNERAL Heavy Rain Kept Persons in a Chapel All Night in Texas Cemetery. Hillsboro, Tex.—Sixty-three persons who gathered in the chapel at the Brandon cemetery to attend the fu- neral of Mrs, Knuckles, were forced to spend the night there, being marooned by the heavy rainstorm which neces- sitated postponing the interment un- tl the next morning, During the funeral service the rain started and fell in such torrents that It formed little ditches which ran into the grave and completely filled it with mud and water, The grave was cleared in the morning and the interment held. It was too lute to return home when the rain stopped, so those guthered for the funeral sent out and got some cof- fee and sat up all night so us to attend the burial the next morning, GIRLS CLIMB HIGH CHIMNEY Colorado Young Ladies Do the Fly Act ‘on Dare From Male Com- anions, Eaton, Colo.—Climbing hand over hand to the top of the smokestack on the sugar factory here, ve young won en of Eaton did the human-fly act on a dare by thelr mule companions, who promised them a box of candy each If they accomplished the feut. ‘The smoke- stack 1s 231 feet high and is built of cement. ‘The women not only climbed to the top but returned to the ground in order without assistance from any of the men, some of whom had at- tempted the feat and failed. The young women who got to the top of the stack were Misses Martin White, Irene Pixler, Lettie White and Mes. dames L. M. Stenekiug and Auua Bickle. STORM LEFT MANY SNAKES Six Are Killed on One Lawn in " “Texas:After the Hurricane | Passes. San Antonio, Tex—They're swatting ‘snakes at Rockport now, ~ Col. Frank Holland killed six on the Nave oe is lel ein ib race stands near Rockport after Friday's hurrleane, according to a report, “Some of the snakes were rattle snakes and were at least four fect Tong.” it was sald. “Colonel Holland and ‘a neighbor were preparing to. yo ishing when the storm broke.” ieimia dak a he widen: St. Louis, Mo.—"“Where am I?” asked Harry MeStravick, thirty-one Years old, when he came to at the city ispensary after Sergeant Peters found him in a stupor in front of 1512 North Leffingwell avenue. “St, Louis!” he exclaimed, when his query was an- swered. “I'd like to know how I got here, The last I remember I was leay- Ing home in New Orleans and starting for a show.” MeStravick said he had taken one or two drinks in New Or- leans. nn High school threw out the one he al- ready had and bought Wlarita’s, Plorita has made, among other arti- cles, two large mahogany library ta- bles, a walnut china closet, a shaving cabinet, equipped with a bevel mirror; & gun rack which looks like a china closet, plano bench, tabouret, coxy- corner seat and a doll’s chair, " She Is her own designer, Electric burglar alarms surround the ‘treasury at Washington and are tested exery fifteen minutes, day and night. PRAYER FLAGS OF TIBETANS When They Flutter Pleas of The De. Nout Asati 40 the ‘Omnipotent. Encireling the buildings of Lhasa, Tibet, is the Sacred road, merely to walk along which absolyes the mortal from all earthly sins, and many pil grims prostrate theinselves for Its en- tire length, thus securing everlasting happiness in thelr future life, John Claude White writes in the National Geographic Magazine. ‘The most interesting portion of the Sacred road ix where it runs through Some sharp limestone rocks, carved deeply with Ogures of Buddtia painted In many colors. From the rocks prayer flags are sus: pended on Ines running to an island In the river. ‘These prayer flags are universal in Tibet, and so long. as they are moving they are recording Prayers for the benefit of those whe put them up, All devotees, men and women, walk always turning a sinall hand prayer wheel, filled with minute prayers printed on thin paper; and large Prayer wheels, filled in some cases with tons of paper prayers, are set revolving by water power, Staller ones are turned by the hot air rising from butter lamps, Single prayers, printed on thin cloth, are strung vertically on poles 01 stretched ncross open spaces to flutte {n the wind and thus send millions of Drayers vibrating toward the Omnipo tent for the benefit of someone's soul They are most pleturesque. An ole Jama I once questioned on the subjec told me “that if the person turning the wheel truly believed that by doing s¢ he was accumulating merit, it would certainly count as a meritorious ae tion.” Characters of Birds, The federal government Is investl- gating birds with a view to discover: Ing whether they are harmful or help- ful to mankind. Of forty or fifty spe cles, exclusive of hawks and owls, thus far put through. this selentifc third degree, only one has been found harmful—the English sparrow, ‘This quarrelsome little creature {san tn qualified nulsanee. All other birds of the group mentioned are either Innoe- uous or helpful, and many of them are worth well-nigh their welght in gold to the farmer and fruit raiser, Of hawks and owls there are 75 spectes found in this country, only six of which are injurious. ‘The rest either do no harm at all, or more than make up for occasional depredations by thelr services in keeping down ver min, The moral seems to be that when In doubt about the character of a bird ‘alve it the benefit of that doubt. ‘The chances are about fourwen to one that even the suspected hawk or ow! Is a frlend In disguise, and other feathered “creatures, with the single exception of the sparrow, are just and righteous al together. | Sasatcatta Baila. The dethroned sultan of Zanzibar, Allben-Hamoud, who now lives In Paris, 1s a pensioner of the French government, He claims to be a descend- ant of Mahomet, but he has, it is feared, in his new environment, ceased to be a truly good Mohammedan, He 1s called by his intimates Raschid, which is Intended to hint that like Har- oun-alRasehid, of the “Arabian Nights,” he is not averse to nocturnal adventures among the infidels of Paris, that {s, to what is known in plainer English as “slumming.” In order to gtatify his personal taste while in some sort paying homage to the tenets of the prophet, it Is sald that when he seats himself at table, he is careful to place the koran beside his plate and with eyes turned skyward he murmurs in Arabie: “O holy prophet, may thy Koran protect me!" after which he in- duiges to his heart's content in wine ‘nd pork chops. Looking Within, Carlyle sald: “Religion is a re- awakening of thine own self from with- in.” How many refuse to look at it that way and keep snatching at ex: terior things to make their lives bet- ter, None ever succeed, and yet near- ly all our great institutions of learn- ing, religion, civic and social progress are built upon the idea that life is merely an accretion—the sway of out- side things. ‘These are necessary, A spirit cannot be unfolded without them. ‘The inherent force is the main thing. Life is a failure without It, And what is this divine energy that originates all good? Its existence can be proved only by its fruits, which are kindness, gentleness, courtesy, helpful- ness, love, peace, long suffering, Joy— these are the fruits of the spirit and are so inseparable from it that they may be regarded as the spirit itself ‘These make the spirit visible. Original Home of Welshmen. Jutland was probably the original home of our Kyinrie ancestors as well as (at a later period) of some so- called Saxon invaders. It was peo- pled’ In classical times by the Clmbri, fdentified by ethnologists with the Cymry, or modern Welshmen. ‘The Germans magnanimously declined to annex Jutland with Schleswig-Holsteln, It was then considered a worthless waste of moors, sand dunes and marshes, But the industrious Danes have transformed what one English traveler styled “a Godforsaken wilder- ness” Into the most prosperous pas- toral country of western Europe.— Westminster Gazette, German Women Workers. Women workers in Germany are Proving a success as substitutes for men at the front. It ts believed that the training now belng obtained by large body of women In work ordinar- fly done by men tn factories, offices, banks, ete., will be valuable when peace Is restored in bridging over the effects of the war on various German industries, enabling them to reach nor- mal conditions more rupidiy. Counee! Diedained. “You shouldn't allow the little things of life to disturb you," “I don't know about that. A germ is ‘about the littlest thing I know of.” LESSON FOR OCTOBER 1 PLOT THAT FAILED, aebAe sietian'e Againnt thee; but they shall not prevail against thee: for Tam with thee, saith Sehovah, to deliver thee—Jer, 1:19, ‘The stirring’events of this lesson o¢- curred in the Castle Antonla and the Sanhedrin hall, near the temple court of Jerusalem; also in Caesarea, the ‘Roman capital of Judea, on the Medl- teranean coast, in the year A. D. 5%, Just at the close of Paul’s third mis- slonary journey. The lesson pictures: two sticcessive days of strange adven- tures In which Paul was concerned, a harrow escape and the unexpected providences used in his deliverance. ‘The day was inaugurated by Paul's magte words “I am a Roman cttizen,” which caused the commander, Lyslas, to release him from the threatened Scourging, and made him more than ‘ordinarily careful in his treatment of Paul. + 1. Before the Elders (vy. 1-12). By roferring hack to chapter 21, v. 18, we ‘find the charge which really underlay all of Paul's trouble, his preaching in the name of the Lord Jesus, Paul's lee {s Interesting. He gives us a rehearsal of his Christian life, Inying “emphasis upon its blamelessness and the fact that he Is not nn apostate Jew. ‘The high priest speaks to silence him, but not gently. Although Paul for a moment seems to give way to his justifiable indignation, he quickly re- |Yeuls his reverence for the rulers of | the people. He then divides the san- | hedrin. Read carefully chapter 22:6-7, |and compare with verses 17 and 18. ‘The sanhedrin could not explain this testimony of Paul, and were seeking to put aside the whole question. An Interesting discussion would be to con- sider the insult to Paul, Was his in- dignation right and rightly expressed? Another question, the matter of Paul's apology. Just for what did he apoto- gize? Is tt ever wrong to speak evil of rulers? These were indeed duys of stress and storm, Was Paul Justified in dividing the sanhedrin in order to conquer thelr opposition to him? Again, how God used these incidents in the furtherance of the gosped s a Suggestive lesson for us all, It has been hinted that Ananias was not in his priestly garments, and therefore perhaps not readily recognized by Paul. Paul may never have seen him, as he was elected high priest ufter Paul bad left the council. It Is inter- esting to note that It Is not said that anyone struck Paul or that Paul did not apologize for his words or deny them to be true, but only for thelr be- {ng spoken to the high priest. Read [Am this connection what Christ suid to || the Phartsees (Matt. 23:27). Paul ap ologized because he had broken the | law found in Exodus 22:28, In the trial of Christ one of the officers struck Jesus with the palm of his hand, whereupon Jesus answered him, say- ing: “If I have spoken evil, bear wit- ness of the evil, but if well, why smit- | est thou me?" On the other hand, when Jesus was tll-treated by the com- mon soldires, he opened not his mouth, Was Paul one “who was angry and sinned not?” (See Eph. 4:26). Our danger {8 not so much In the posses- sion of a temper, but in our lack of controlling It. U1. The Plot and Deliverance (vv. 12- 85). Paul’s prospect was not a pleas- "ant one. Tn his darkness God appeared to his faithful servant to cheer him (v.11). Perhaps Pavl was tempted to think be had made a mistake in com- ing to Jerusalem over the protests of his friends, but evidently the Lord heartily approved of his testimony | there. A dangerous conspiracy was | forming against him, but God was, as | he always 1s, beforehand with his com- - fort and preparation for the crisis. We have often speculated as to what be- } enme of the forty men who entered {nto It (see y, 12)—whether they se- | tually lived up to thelr oath, If they | did, they must have died of starvation. | They were determined men, willing to | go any length, and fancled they were | doing the will of God. There Is no )| more dangerous man than he who fan- | cles that he must be the Judge as to -| who are God's friends and who are his -| foes, and that he is the appointed exe- | cutioner of God's judgment, ‘The plot ’| was well Inld, and seemed certain of "| gttecess, but It fated miserably. (See Psalm 2:1-4; 64:1-10; Isaiah 41:10), |The wicked, who leave God out of thelr plans, no matter how cunningly '| they plot, are doomed to failure (tom, || 8:31). These plotters co-operated with | the priest. Ecclesiastics have often -| descended to the lowest villainy. Men | are not murdered today, though thelr >| reputations are often blasted by un- *| principled and hellishly impelled pro- | fessed followers of the lowly Naza- -/ rene. Paul had friends in this city. + | His nephew's discovery and revelation, || und the Gentile soldier, a colonel, ef- ‘| fered his deliverance, In the boy's }| heart there must have been great ad- "| mtration for the uncle, It would be '| well for teachers of boys to have them -| repeat in their own language this boy's story. Paul was not safe in Jerusa- lem. ‘The Roman governor recognized the nature of the conspiracy, and the >| desperate character of the Jewish fae "| nktics, and therefore sent him under @ : Sires gust’ te Seetaren, SG ae reached after a journew on horseback, | sctleetaths Montene Mike mites rte Ghia ake ‘The twenty-third Psalm is a person- al possession for every Christian, Again and again It has been pointed out that if the frst verse begun, “The Lord is shepherd,” it ts not likely that men and women and children for 8,000 years would have counted It one of thelr priceless possessions, But the phrase is “The Lord ts my shep, hera.”" Ad PUBLISHED WEEKLY ‘All communications should be addressed tothe Kansas Ciy Sun, 1800 Bast 18th Breet. Bell Phone East 999. Bntered as second-class matter, August Piss At the postotfice at Kanga City, fo. under the act of March 5, 1879. Nelson C. Crews.......Editor and, Owner ita we’ Glenn... 1iGeneral "Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Sih Sanh ssccscostssvasssnonesnioeyecDMS er Seomtha coy istercacseoctieatoesson ree Meet icccistoseessasascestca, 00 eile i ace ADVERTISING RATE, 60 CENTS PER INCH. MEMBER NATIONAL NEGRO PRESS ASSOCIATION. ees EDITORIALS, Good morning. Will some of the campaign orators who reiterate that Wilson has kept us out of the war kindly indieate what nation threatened to make war on the Vnlted States? The election of Walter S. Dickey to | the United States Senate from Mis: | souri would go further to restore the. state's impaired reputation among in- dustrial investors than could any other fuct or event. It would bring millions to the state. | The Sun has no reason to retract the statement made some months ago that Judge Ralph S. Latshaw is the ablest and fairest man who bas ever sat upon the criminal bench in this county and we believe that fact will be attested by a tremendous majority November 7. ‘The marked improvement in the fi- nancial system at Allen Chapel, to- gether with the elevation of the re- ligious service by the elimination of superfluous announcements and col- lections is a fine tribute to the skill and intelligence of the popular pastor, Rey. Wm. H. Thomas, and his loyal cabinet of officers. It you enjoy the Kansas City Sun and wish to see it made larger and better, get your neighbor to subscribe for it. Kansas City needs the best possible conveyance of the thought and thrift of our people and that’s what The Sun is here for. In order to meet this increasing demand it must have an increasing support such as every loyal citizen may give with but little effort. Do it now. Up to this time President Wilson has not given out that promised let- ter setting forth his attitude toward the Negro. But why bother about it at all? Is there anything that he can say that he has not already in- dicated by his silence, his indiffer- ence and his total lack of respect for our welfare and decent rights? It is futile under present circumstances to ask for a more cogent expression from a President who all along has sided with Tillman and Vardaman in his treatment of the most loyal and patient one-tenth of the American population. Every patriotic Negro should begin now to influence the sentiment of the Yoters of his particular neighborhood. ‘Tiere is absolutely nothing for us out- side of the Republican party. The only way for us to ever regain the civic and political rights which have been taken away from us is to unite in restoring the nation and the state into the control of the party of free- dom and prosperity. Let us yote for a rule at Washington which will in- sure us against national discrimina- tion and insult. Let us vote for a rule at Jefferson City which will provide for our fair treatment and protection in our homes. Altogether now, Hughes and Fairbanks, Dickey and Lamm. If you could get Walter S. Dickey to manage your business for you, you'd jump at the chance, wouldn't you? Well, why not get him to act for you as one of the senatorial directors of the state in the management of the greatest business corporation in the ‘world—the U. 8. government—in which You are an assessable stockholder? Among the, other things that the election of Judge Lamm to the gov- ernorship will mean, will be a con- demnation of the high-handed outrage which the Democratic state adminis- tration police board in Kansas City committed last spring in causing the arrest “for investigation” of over three hundred citizens on election day morn: ing and holding them until it was too late to vote. The sequel showed that the governor was in on this wrong. ‘This Is one of the things endorsed by the Democratic state platform by im- plification. Senator Reed, who is a candidate for re-election, though nearly a hun dred thousand Democrats indicated thelr opposition t him on primary day, is calling on the people to stand by their president, Only about a year ago, Reed's ears were warm at what the Democrats of Missouri and par. ticularly the Demoeratle newspapers wére saying ab—out his own opposi. tion to Wilson because the latter hadn't given some of his henchmen Jobs for which they were not fit, Un- der the circumstances, thousands of Democrats are going to take advan- tage of the circumstances to vote for @ high class business man, Walter S. Dickey, for senator, in the belief that ‘most of the problems of government are now business problems and ought to be solved on a business rather than ‘& political basis by patriotic business men, Dette eee eres eens * Dr. EB. A. Walker announces * + change of Bell Phone to East 4550, * * Same location, 18th and Paseo, | ¢ ech Loewe ees ts 6 Oe ERENEZER CHAPEL. Sunday was the big day at Ebe- nezet, being the last Quarterly mect- ing for this Conference year. Three visiting ministers filled the pulpit all day, Sunday morning Dr. B. F. Wat: son, secretary of Church Extension of Washington, D. C,, Sacramental Ser- mon; at 3:00 by the Rey. J. R. Ran- som, pastor of the Metropolitan A. M. BE. Church, Kansas City, Kans., and Rey. H. C. Johnson, Missionary Bap- tist Evangelist. The Choir appeared for the first time in their vestments and in their processional and reces- sional made a very beautiful showing. Their singing was up to the usual standard....Sunday evening, October 8, our pastor, Rev. W. C. Williams, will preach his “farewell sermon” be- fore going to the Annual Conference which convenes in Springfield, Octo- ber 11, We hope it will not be a fare- well sermon indeed because the en- Ure membership and friends of Ebe- nezer feel that at this particular time we cannot give the Reverend up. We need him to finish the great work he has started in that of building our much-needed edifice. The past week his reverence received the following lettr from th Hon. N, C. Crews, who was in Indiana, on a campaign tour in the interest of the race and the Re- publican party of which he is a mem- ber “Indianapolis, Ind., Sept, 23, 1916. “Dr. W. C. Williams. “My dear friend and brother: 1 re gret exceedingly that I cannot be at your Quarterly meeting in person to- morrow, but I assure you T am with you in spirit, This must not be your last quarterly meeting at Ebenezer, because the Church, the race and the city needs you in Kansas City another year and I think our good Bishop will see it in that light as you have not served the full time allotted by out dicipline, Inclosed find $1.00 to help in your offering today.” Mr. Crews is voicing the sentiment of Ebenezer’s members and friends in praying for the Reverend’s return.... There were six additions to _the Church Sunday....Rey, and Mrs. Wil |liams left Tuesday for Wichita, Kan. l¢o attend the Annual Conference. Betty@ Sam's Little Cornes) ek. g P Gs yi Wa ous as a aged © Ss Tn ee sas Se As THEY a —That you can certainly rent your rooms if you advertise them in The | Sun. —That the girl who thinks she is a whole lot better than the fellow she is going with is off just a little. A man might pull her up but she will ‘never be able to “raise” him. spent for gasoline this summer I could weather and a few po’k chops this ae ‘Too late brother, too late. | —That at a recent club meeting in this city the members were asked to write out a list of questions to be ‘discussed during the season and among the list were the following in- tellectual suggestions: | What makes a wildcat wild? Why og a chicken cross the road? Who was Moses’ mother? _ Some Club, eh? Statement of the ownership, man- agement, circulation, etc., required by the Act of Congress of August 24, 1912, of Kansas City Sun, published weekly at Kansas City, Mo. for Oc tober 1, 1916, State of Missouri) County of Jackson) ss, Before me a notary public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared the editor and owner of the Kansas City Sun and the following is, to the best of his knowl. edge a true statement of the owner ship, management of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in Section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations printed on the reverse of this form to-wit: ‘That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor and business managers are: Publisher, Nelson ©. Crews, Kan- sas City, Mo. , Raitor, Nelson C. Crews, Kansas City, Mo. Managing Editor, Nelson C. Crews, Kansas City, Mo, Business Manager, Willa M, Glenn, Kansas City, Mo, ‘That the owners are: Nelson C, Crews, Kansas City, Mo. ‘That the known bondholders, mort- gagees and other security holders own- {ng or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgagees or other securities are: None. ‘NELSON C. CREWS, = Editor. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 27th day of September, 1916, WILLA M, GLENN, cont commission expires April 10, THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916 ? Madame Page’s ° e . . Criterion Hair Preparations YOU'VE TRIED THE REST, % | NOW TRY THE BEST. Criterion stands for qual- ” A WHAT THEY WILL DO. ity, as ‘‘Sterling"’ stands for ba * ‘The Criterion preparations Good Silver. i 3 ey will make kinky stubborn Criterion has been tested ee = ee sn een: on thoroughly and proven to be m= 3 remove the dandruff, stop the most wonderful, of all bs] E> ys itching and burning of the hair preparations. a“ stop hair from falling x % P promote a growth of AGENTS WANTED. Ke [re ong, thick, glossy hair, . For GOOD PROFIT. re man, woman or child. MADAME B. R. PAGE Scalp Specialist and Manufacturer of the Criterion Hair Grower 2533 Woodland Ave. Bell East 1358w Kansas City, Mo. ‘The editor made a flying trip to In- diana where he delivered the Emanci- pation address at Terre Haute Sept. 22. He was met at the station by a delegation of the leading citizens and escorted to the home of Mr. John Jack- son, Twehty-third and Liberty where he was royally entertained. He was Presented with an elegent bouquet of flowers preceding his addross by Mr. Roy Porter, a contractor of Paris, Il, which city was largely represented at the celebration, ‘The presentation was made by Dr. Bethea, one of the leading physicians of that section, The meet: ing was presided over by Mr. John Roundtree, Esq. the only lawyer of color in Terre Haute, who was a for mer Topekan. We also met our old friend, Prof, Fred Blake, grand secre- tary of the A. F. & A. M. of Indiana, and also had many inquiries for Kan- sas Cityans, Next day we hurried to Indianapolis where we witnessed the greatest parade we ever saw in honor of Hughes and Fairbanks, While there we stop: ped at the ¥. M. C. A. where Mr. FE. DeFrantz, brother to our own splendid secretary, is secretary in charge, but we told him very frankly that their building was not in it with the Kansas City plant, We also met Rey. F. P. Christian, former Kansas Cityan who is doing well there. From Indianapolis we hurried over to Chi- cago to meet the National Republican committee, and while there, we had the pleasure of meeting in company with Hon, Jno, E. Swanger, our old friend and benefactor, Webster Davis, with whom we chatted for nearly an hour and who has promised Chafrman Swanger to make —some speeches in Missouri for the G. 0. P, ‘The beautiful bungalow home of Mrs, Viola Hubbard, 1497 W. 36th street, was the scene of a brilliant re- ception September 13, from 4 to 7 p.m, when she entertained fifty beautifully gowned ladies complimen- tary to Mrs, Pearl Lowery-Winters, of Bakersfield, and Mrs, Sallie Jack- son of Western University. The dec- orations were asparagus ferns and pink carnations, the handsome center- piece being set off by a beautiful bas- ket of pink carnations and ferns with pink tulle ribbon. In the receiving line were Mesdames Hubbard, Pearl Lowery-Winters, 8. Jackson, W. M. Slayton and Irma Robinson. Little Juliet Harris received cards, ‘The re- freshment consisted of ice cream and sundaes, punch, cake nuts and mints. Mrs, Lauretta Butler discoursed mu- sie for the occasion. It was the so- ciety event of the season.—Los An- geles Eagle. SECOND CHRISTIAN CHURCH. The services at the Christian Church ‘Twenty-fourth and Woodland were well attended, ‘There were many expressions that sermons by the pastor were instructive and help- ful. There were two additions to the church, ‘The choir has secured the service of Prof, Smith as an instruc: tor and showed marked improvement. ‘The offering in all departments were good. The enthusiasm is increasing among the six clubs to raise one hun: dred dollars each by the third Sunday in October. The C. E. society is ad: vaneing in real Christian Endeavor work. The program of the Women’s Missionary society was good. Sub: jects next Sunday 11:00 A. M., in “Modern Golden Wedges and Baby: lonian Garments in the Christian Warfare.” 8:00 P.M, “The Non: Conversion of King Agrippa.” VINE STREET BAPTIST CHURCH. All services were wall attended Sun- day with four additions to the Chureh. v..sWe are indeed glad to see Mr. Geo, W. Taylor out to Chureh Sunday. We hope he will continue to improve. ....Dr. T, H. Ewing made a fine lec- ture Sunday at 5 o'clock for the bene- fit of the B. Y. P. U, The lecture was indeed grand...The Women’s Mission Cirele is doing fine under the leader- ship of Mrs. Gertrude Tibbs. All are invited every Tuesday evening..... Sunday was our Rally day. Mrs. Hill was the Champion. She brought in the largest amount of money. EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO. Albany Hotel—Visitors and guests last week were: E. W. Brown, St. Louis, Mo.; Wm, Patrick, Kansas City Mo.; Mr. and Mrs, Richard Gaines Chicago, Il; Mrs. C, M. Thonipson, ‘Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Davenport, Salina, Kas.; S. H. Dudley, Washington, D. C.; Bernard Thomas Frank Fryson, Mrs. Roy Monioe, of Omaha, Nebr.; Drs. Perry and Walker, and Mrs. Daisy» McKnight, of Kansas City, Mo.....Mr, Wm, McKnight, head: walter at the Elms Hotel, wiil open the season with his All Star cake walkers, and is expecting a big sea sen beginning September 2. ‘_ MANICURING, , MISS DORA HAYWARD, 1514 E. 18th St., Home phone Bast 4119. First lass service. . MESSENGER SERVICE. THE ENTERPRISE, 1521 East 18th Street, Charles A. Starks, Prop. Bell phone, Bast 1521, PHYSICIANS. A. D. BRADBURY, M. D., 821 Independence Ave. Bell phone Main 4438. PHOTOGRAPHERS. J. E. MILLER STUDIO, 1622 Mast 18th Street. Bell phone, E. 91. POULTRY. MOON'S, 1335 East 18th Street. Bell, Grand 1746W. 1223 Baltimore. Bell phone, Grand 2928Y. PRINTERS. 0. A. FRANKLIN, 1309 East 18th Street. Bell phone, Grand 2988, REAL ESTATE and EMPLOYMENT. 4B C EMPLOYMENT AND INVESTMENT CO., 500 Minnesota Ave. (upstairs) Kansas City, Kans. Bell phone, West 1743; Home phone, West 1036. C. W. Neloms, Mgr. COLORED PEOPLE'S INVESTMENT CO., 2427 Vine St. Bell Phone East 1011, Home East 4011. Sol Smith, Pres « RESTAURANTS. MRS. FANNIE ISAM, 805 Independence Avenue. SHOE STORE. ‘@. A. PAGE'S SHOE STORE; 1507 East 18th street. Bell phone, East 1328, UNDERTAKERS. H. B. MOORE, 1031 Independence Avenue. Bell phone Main 3398W, . Home phone Main 3341. 0, H. COUNTEE, Licensed Embalmer, 2220 Vine St., Bell Phone, East 3336, Home East 3341. ADKINS BROS. & GREEN, 19th and Vine Sts. Phones, East 4349. WATKINS BROS, 1729 Lydia Ave. Bell Phone Grand 987, Home Main 7989. Res., Bell East 3281. SHOE REPAIRING. zuzornro SHOE & REPAIR SHOP, J .©. Banks, Prop., 151414 East | 18th street. Bell phone, East 4939, ‘-Restaurants— masa cee F.C. MALONE, Prop. 2120 Vine street. GARAGES. ECONOMY GARAGE, S. A. Robinson, Prop., 1400 East 19th street. | 7; Bell phone, Grand 2191, Hair dressers— | GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, DRY GOODS and NOTIONS. lw. L, MARTIN, 1313 East 1t8h street. THEATRES. | OLD KENTUCKY, 1702 East 12th Street, J. L. Williams, propriee | tor, Bell phone East 4735. i Mima € | 4 WONDERFUL HAIR DRESSER AND GROWER seta aes One thousand agents wante. Good money made. ‘ a THE STAR HAIR GROWER. This is a wonderful rte preparation, Can be used with or without straight ia, ening irons. g ext Sells for 25¢ per box—one 25¢ box will prove its N > value. Any person that will use a 25¢ box will be a convinced, No matter what has failed to grow your hair just give THE STAR HAIR GROWER a trial and be convinced. Send 25¢ for full size box. If you wish to be an agent send $1.00 and we will send you a full supply that you can begin work i ) with at once; also agents’ terms, Send all money by Money Order to Sg THE STAR HAIR GROWER MFGR. oe 1113 Clark Street. Evanston, tL . . Negro Business and Professional Direc- : tory of Greater Kansas City AUTHORS. MRS. MARIA P. WILLIAMS, Author and Lecturer, 1204 Highland Avenue, Bell phone East 4735. BAKERIES, MRS. SUSIE OWENS, 2331 Vine street. Bell phone, East 5017. BARBER SHOPS. THE BRUNSWICK, 2405 Vine Street. Bell, East 14373. R. D. Jack- CAR GBiAG Soa ’S BARBER SHOP, W. F. O’Bonnon, Prop., 558 | Grand Avenue. BARBECUE STANDS. BEAUTY PARLORS AND HAIR DRESSERS. MRS. ETHEL E. WILSON, 1609 East 14th, XX Century Hair Grower. Bell phone, East 1871W. MRS, MARY W. HOGAN, Poro Hair Dresser, 1603 A. E. 14. Bell phone, East 3805M. MRS, ADDIE COLLINS, Poro Hair Dresser, 2744 Highland Avenue, Bell phone, East 1417W. MRS. MINNIE DOYLE, Poro Hair Dresser, 2732 Highland avenue. Bell phone, Bast 1346W. MISS MAE BELLE JACKSON, Manufacturer of Wonderful Hair Grower, 1913 East 10th street, Bell phone East 3237W. MRS. DORA B, SYDNOR, Poro Hair Dresser, 1812 East 10th street, Bell phone, East 1908. MRS, DELILAH M. 8. DOTTREY, 1102 Highland avenue. Poro Hair Dresser. MRS. LUCY BENFORD, 1305 Michigan avenue, Poro Hair Dresser. Bell phone, East 22214. S MRS. LEONA MOSBY, 1317 Woodland. Poro Hair Dresser, Bell phone, East 4495. MRS. LUCILE BINSON, Poro Hair Dresser, 818 East 10th street. Bell phone, M, 4103W. MRS. L, B, SMITH, 2420 Woodland avenue, Poro Hair Dresser, Bell phone, Bast 2717W. MRS. URITH U. K. THOMPSON, 1007 Vine St. Bell phone, East 5280. Poro Hair Dresser. MRS. SUSIE GIBSON, 1725 Michigan Ave, Poro Hair Dresser. Bell |____ phone, Bast 3058J. MRS. F. BETTS, 1507 Hast 17th street. Poro Hair Dresser. E, L, FULBRIGHT-GRANT, 1204 Highland Ave. Bell phone, Grand 21293. MESDAMES JACKSON & JOHNSON, 18th and Highland Ave. Bell phone E. 4788. MRS. BERTA JOHNSON, 2327 Highland Ave. Poro Hair Dresser. Bell Phone, East 2207 : MRS. CADDIE WITCHER, 1510 Michigan Ave. Hair and Scalp Treatment. Bell phone, Hast 4167X. MRS. R. J. BROWN, 1806 Howard Ave, Poro Hair Dresser. MRS. CORA D. WILLIAMS, 1714 East 13th St. Bell phone, East 36105. Poro Hair Dresser. MRS. ANNA ROBERTS, 1418 East 24th St. Hair Dresser, Scalp Treatment. F MRS. SALLIE LASHLEY, Poro Hair Dresser, 1332 East 16th St. (MRS. F. A. COOK, Poro Hair Dresser, 1226 Vine St. Bell phone, B. 2820. MRS. ALICE M. THOMAS, Poro Hair Dresser, 1022 West 30th St., Phone, Grand 2456W. CAFES. MRS. H. W. DOTSON, 1705 Hast 12th. Bell Phone, B. 2214. JONES’ CAFE, 2110 Vine Street, Everything to satisfy. WOODLAND CAFE, Charles E. Gilliam, Prop., 1804 East 12th St. DELMONICA CAFE, 1512 Hast 18th St.’ Bell phone, East 618. MRS. 8. J. BRADLEY, 1519 East 23d Street. CLEANERS, DYERS AND TAILORS. WORTHAM BROS,, 1831 Paseo. Bell Phone East 701. THE MID-WEST SANITARY CLEANERS AND DYERS, William 7. Stanley, Prop., 2438 Vine Street. Bell phone, East 1206, COAL AND FEED. W. W. PAYNE, 1902 1-2 Vine St. Bell phone, East 559; Home phone, East 4132, DRUG STORES. PEOPLE'S DRUG STORE, 18th and Paseo. Bell phone East 1814, Home East 4082, | HARRY J. BROWN, old hats made new, cleaning and pressing, 1808 Forest, Bell phone Grand 30130. HOTELS. - | OAK LEAF HOTEL, 405 East 19th street. FLORISTS. CROSTHWAIT FLORAL CO., 1801 East 18th St. Bell phone, East | 272. Home phone, East 4070. | LAWYERS. 0. H, CALLOWAY, 601 Delaware, Home phone M58, Bell phone Main 448, Practices in all courts. |W. ©, HUESTON, 601 Delaware, Home phone M58, Bell phone Mair |" 448. Legal advice. Practices in all courts. ‘| A. SHACKLEFORD, Attorney at Law, 516 Minnesota Ave., Kan sas City, Kas. Bell phone, West 3866. | LADIES’ TAILORING. | MRS, ELNORA MOSS, 1300 Woodland Ave, Bell phone, East 4438 : LUNCH ROOM. |B. R. ROBERTSON, 1314 East 18th street; Bell phone Grand 2666W | WALKERS’ LUNCH ROOM, 1735 Troost Avenue. x ee ee a | } Bell Phone, East 3083. Bell Phone, East 3083, : ; Why Not Make Your Hair Look Its Best | BY USING | FULBRIGHT’S WONDER | } Remember, Our Preparation Brings Out these Qualities of the Hair. BEAUTY —LIFE—LUSTRE—COLOR | - Our Hair Grower Unsurpassed in Producing ) | the Health and Growth. 1204 Highland, THE E. L, FULBRIGHT-GRANT CO. . ANNOUNCEMENT - DR. A. R. EAGLESON—DENTIST who practiced at Guthrie, Okla., for eight years announces the opening of ~ Dental Parlors at the Northwest Corner of ‘ ‘Twelfth and Vine Streets ra Kansas City, Mo. In office with Dr. L, E. Bailer, via Mi ° efe issouri Pacific First Out—First In Ly. Kansas City ..........9:00a.m. Arrive St. Louis........,.5:30p.m. Fast Mid-Day Service Ly. Kansas City.........11:10a.m. Arrive St. Louis......... 7:30 p.m. Direct connections for East and Southeast. Convention Night Service Ly, Kansas City.........10:10 p.m, Arrive St. Louis......... 7:25a.m, City Ticket Office, 901 Main Street. ae -Satseribe lar The Stu CITY NEWS If you can't dance, learn. Prof. Roscoe White is teaching quite a number for the winter party dances. Mrs. Grace Bell Davis of St. Louis is visiting in the city. Prof. Roscoe White spent Sunday in St. Joseph. Shoes for growing boys and girls at $2.00. Page's, 1507 East 18th St. Every good African Methodist in Kansas City should pay their dollar money Sunday. That means all the Churches of that faith in the city and Allen Chapel in particular. Mrs. W. O. Fisher, of Rosedale, who recently underwent a serious operation at a private sanitarium, is home again and improving nicely to the pleasure of her relatives and friends. MONEY—MONEY—MONEY. Furniture loans made to honest people. Pay back in weekly payments. Business strictly confidential. Bell Phone, Grand 2303-R. After spending a very pleasant vacation with his parents, Mr. Earl D. Thomas, left Tuesday evening for Chicago to continue his studies at Chicago University. He stopped en route at St. Louis, Mo., and Alton, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Chas, Davis, of 2446 Highland avenue announce the marriage of their daughter, Ida Loise, to Mr. Harry Jamison, September 6, in Oswego, Kas. Mr. Jamison is a well known and prosperous farmer of Oswego, Kansas, at which place they will reside. LADIES. Now is your chance to get real Oriental drawn work done by hand in your city by an American citizen. Get your Christmas work done early Mrs. Lee, 1228 Michigan avenue. The Second Regiment Band under command of Capt. W. G. Melford left last Friday evening for St. Louis, Mo., to furnish music for the Allied Military Officers Conference. Their expenses and entertainment is being paid by Col. Chas. A. Mills, one of St. Louis' most energetic business men. LUULA C. SUMMERS Planist and Teacher Will open her studios OCTOBER 2, 1916 2021 North Sixth Street. Bell Phone West 1752 Mr. and Mrs. A. Garrett, parents of Mrs. M. C. Mitchell, who were called to the bedside of their daughter, Mrs. L. Brooks, of Mustang, Okla., have returned, reporting Mrs. Brooks much improved. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to extend our thanks to the friends who so kindly assisted us at the death of our sister, Maggie Harris, and we are especially grateful to the Misses Fergusons for the beautiful floral tribute. MRS. LIZZIE BENTON, MRS. MAZIE KEITH, MISS MAUDE HARRIS. Mrs. W. M. Lyons, 926 Woodland Avenue, and Mrs. E. A. Marshall, 1008 Vine Street, gave a motor party to Lexington, Mo., September 31. The guests were: Mrs. Chas Martin, 2736 N. Sherman, Kansas City, Kans.; Mrs. Lloyd, 1309 E. 13th; Mrs. Robinson, 1008 Highland; Mrs. R. E. Strickland, 1408 Lydia, and Mrs. J. P. Hawkins of Lexington, Mo. Among the pleasant callers at the Sun office this week was a party of prominent New Yorkers who accompanied the Bankers' Special to the American Bankers' convention this week. They were Mr. and Mrs. Bristo Fitts; Messrs. S. J. Freeman, J. C. C. Reed, Eddie Claybourne, W. Whitefield, Paul Brown and Bock. They were taken for an extended ride over the boulevards by Dr. J. E. Dibble and expressed themselves as amazed at the beauty and magnitude of Kansas City. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank the pastor, Rev. W. H. Thomas, the choir stewardesses and members of Allen Chapel A. M. E. church and Rev. Bacote, of Second Baptist church and other friends, for the sermon and all other sympathies shown at the funeral of my son, Luther Tillman Commodore. H. E. COMMODORE. In Memoriam In sad but loving remembrance of our dear husband and father, L. A. Tillman who passed away, Oct. 3, 1914. "Rest on dear father, your cares are o'er Your willing hand can toil no more, On earth there's grief, in heaven rest, They miss you most who loved you best." MRS. L. A. TILLMAN, JUNE TILLMAN, DR. L. M. TILLMAN, PORTIA TILLMAN JOHNSON, HARRY A. JOHNSON (grandson) Full line of School Shoes at Page's, 1507 E. 18th St. Mrs. Jas. W. Holley has just returned from Manitou, Colo., where she spent two months for her health. She is somewhat better. Mrs. Helen Carter of Chicago, Ill., visited Mrs. Sallie McDonald, 1513 Michigan. English seven will give a public dance Wednesday night, October 4, at White's Dancing Academy, Cottage and Cine Sts. Hon. John Mitchell, the editor and banker of Richmond, Va., who has been in the city attending the American Bankers' Association, has been the recipient of much attention during his stay. Lula Mae Butler has the voice of an Angel and can move a multitude to shouts or to tears. Hear her Sunday morning at Allen and Wednesday evening in concert. The concert given by the Buckner Jubilee Singers at Allen Chapel, Thursday night was fully up to the high standard of this favorite organization and demonstrates that Mr Buckner is doing something else besides making money—that is, cultivating a high musical tempo among the colored people of America. Although late in arriving a large audience greeted them and were highly entertained. The B. M. Weaver Boosters' Club will give a social at the residence of 'Mrs. V. L. Hueston, 1206 Highland Avenue, Wednesday evening, Oct. 4. Refreshments served from 6:00 to 12:00 p. m. The public is invited MRS. V. L. HUESTON, MRS. B. M. WEAVER, MRS. BELL MARTIN, MRS. ALMA ROBINSON, MRS. VIRGINIA McCULLY. DON'T HURRY There is plenty of good time; it's not our aim to hurry you, but we do insist on you being on time. Delays are dangerous. We have a large list of eligible homes to sell and rent cheap; on easy terms, to suit. Should you delay in looking over our list, someone may get your choice. Don't hurry, but act promptly. Bell phone Main 4464. 727 Indep. Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Holmes, prop. and mgr., of the Handy Colored store, 2409 Cine street, returned from a two weeks' visit to Chicago, Detroit, Niagara Falls and Buffalo They report a delightful trip. Mrs. F. C. Hayes, Twenty-seventh and Parkview, Quindaro, Kansas, returned home Sunday night from Chicago, where she has been visiting friends and relatives the past two weeks. Thursday evening at the Y. M. C. A. a full account of the proceedings of the National Business League and the expenses of the ball and banquet will be given. All persons interested are asked to be present. The Ladies Coterie Art club meets next Wednesday with Mrs. R. G. Lewis 915 Vine street. Mr. Jas. Holman of Chicago, Ill., and Miss Florence Holman, of St. Louis, is a brother and niece of Mr. Bud Holman and Mrs. Etta Kenyon, of this city, stopped over in the city after returning from the family reunion at Holden, Mo. The 18th, Mr. and Mrs. Holman, 1014 Highland avenue, entertained them at luncheon. Mrs. Blue, of Omaha, Neb., was among those pressent. After which the party was escorted to the theatre and were also shown over the city in automobiles. They left the same evening for their homes declaring that Kansas City had treated them royally. Wednesday weekly at 8:00 P. M. Jas. H. Crews, president; Mrs. A. C. Coleman secretary; Prof. T. B. Steward, conductor; Mrs. Rogers, treasurer. The teachers of all the schools of the city are invited to be present every Wednesday night the guests of Ward Chapel Bethel, St. Lukes, St. John, Ebenezer, Allen Chapel and others. MRS. ROBERTS. Dist. Supt. MRS. IDA BIRCH. Supt. of Cradle Roll. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank the members of Peaceful Path Lodge No. 140 U. B. F., for the beautiful and courteous manner in laying to rest, the body of Luther Tillman Commodore, and also to thank British America Temple for their many kindnesses and beautiful floral offering. You have a warm spot in our hearts. H. E. Commodore and relatives. The Wilberforce Club will entertain Dr. W. S. Scarborough at the Y. M. C. A. Saturday, September 30. Dr. Scarborough is President of Wilberforce University and is here in the interest of that Institution. The public is invited to meet him in the lobby from 8:30 to 10:30 p. m., Saturday evening. ```markdown ``` THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916 Dr. Southern preached a great sermon last Sunday morning to a large congregation. The Sunday school held a very interesting session last Sunday....Dr. Wm. H. Thomas delivered a fine funeral oration at 3:30 P. M. over the remains of the late Mr. Commodore who was killed by blows from a club in the hands of a police officer....Last Tuesday evening Mr. John Mitchell, Jr., member of the American Bankers' association and editor of the Richmond Planet, delivered a grand lecture to a large audience in this auditorium....The B. Y. P. U.'s held interesting sessions last Sunday evening....In the evening Dr. Southern again delivered a fine discourse. During the past week there were 19 additions to the church. Mr. Roland W. Bruce left for Ann Arbor, Mich., the 25th, to enter the Conservatory of Music. FORD'S HAIR POMADE MAKES HARSH KINNY HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLURABLE ENGINE TO COMB AND PUMP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT PRICE $25 AND 504 A BOTTLE FORD'S HAIR STRAIGHTENER NO. 022 STRAIGHTENS THE HAIR BY ROLLING IT BETWEEN YOUR BRASS ROLLERS AND WORKER THING WE KNOW OF TO STRAIGHTEN HAIR PRICE $1.50 PATENT SECTIONAL TOOTH COMB PATENTED LOCKING DEVICE FOR ROLLING TEETH TIGHT FORD'S SPIRAL HANDLE HAIR STRAIGHTENING AND SHAMPOO COMB NO. 022 SOLID BRASS/NICKEL PLATTER LARGE AND VERY CARRIER BURN THE MATERIAL OF LOCKING DEVICE HOLDS THE HANDLE WITHOUT SOLDERING. PRICE $1.00 FORD'S SMALL BRASS SHAMPOO A HAIR FORD'S MEDIUM SIZED BRASS SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENING COMB NO. 026 A CODD AND SERVICED COMB FOR THE MONEY. PRICE $5.00 ALL OUR GOODS WAREPANED AS DESIGNED OR MONEY REFU FOR SALE BY YOUR SALER OR DIRECT FROM US UPON RECEIPT PRICE, IN WRITING DIRECT, SSM MONEY BY POST OFFICE OR EXIT OZONIZED OX MARROW CO BOTH TIME AND M Crossett's at $4.00 to $8.50 the pair. Fall Shoes, but about a pair of CROSSETT SH You will find one of the sas City. One finds it True Courtesy and Servi Crossett's at $4.00 to $8.50 the pair. BUCKNER & McELROY TRANSFER CO. Furniture and Piano Movers, Express and Baggage. Goods stored, packed and shipped by experienced men. The right price with truck and wagon service. 1404-6 Holmes Street. Bell phone Grand 1566-W. 2716 9880 auopmOH BROWN CLIPPER 40-Horse Power BLUNK'S PLACE 1516 EAST 18TH STREET Fills a long felt want among the Color ed People of this city. Headquarters for Auto Service. Also a fine line of Cigars, and an ele gant shoe shining parlor. For Auto or Taxi stop in or call BELL EAST 4939. Prompt Service—Best Treatment. A. T. MOORE. 1820 E. 18th Street. Phones East 4020 Home. East 4224J Be Phones: East 4020 Home. East 4224J Bell. NEW GARAGE—NOW OPEN Rear 1820 East 18th Street Cars Cleaned and Repaired. First Class Auto Service Day and Night. J. W. EVANS. Phones: Bell East 4224J. Home East 4020. By Mrs. Zenobia Nelson. Mrs. Wm. H. Underwood, 636 New Jersey avenue, is improving after a long illness. Mrs. L. R. Taylor, of 1143 Grandview boulevard, royally entertained the X. I. I. club Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. S. D. Jones, 120 Garfield avenue entertained the Excelsior club of the Metropolitan Church Thursday. A large crowd was present and everything was sold. Miss Doris Lovings returned Friday evening from Lawrence, Kansas, where she is attending Kansas University. She reports the following pupils who were graduates from Sumner High School attending the university: Franklin Bradley, Payne Ransom, Willie Tower, Nathaniel Wheeler and Miss Nalmo Johnson. Miss Lovings returned to Lawrence Monday morning. The Citizens Forum held its annual opening in the Metropolitan Baptist Temple, Sunday, September 17. The program was best, probably in its history. It was indeed a musical and literary treat. The president, Mrs. W. Dwiglings, presiding, opened the forum in her usual graceful commanding manner and in her opening remarks insisted upon the forum making a concrete showing during this year's work; place itself upon record and show that it could do something tangible; that it it is merely a place to display literary talent but a place for racial uplift. Prof. Kealing's address "Filling the bill" was deeply interesting, instructive and practical. In conclusion he suggested that measures be taken toward obtaining information of social, industrial and general conditions of Negroes. The forum at once decided to act and a committee of five was appointed to draft an outline to be followed in securing statistics of the Negroes' general conditions in Kansas City, Kansas, as this is necessary in attempting any kind of general movement to improve the Negroes' general condition. Following is the program rendered September 17: Music. . . . Inter City Band. Invocation. . . . Rev Albert Browne Quotations—Forum; Current. Events Miss Ruth Bradley Solo. . . . Mrs. S. C. Capp Instrumental Solo . . Missella Neeley Address. . . Prof. J. J. Neeley Instrumental Solo. Miss Beulah Douglas Critit's report.....Mr. J. C. Truman SECOND CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 24th and Woodland Ave. Bible school at 9:30 a. m.; preaching and Communion at 11 a. m.; Y. P. S. C. E. at 7 p. m.; preaching at 8:15 p. m.; prayer meeting Wednesday at 8:30 p. m.; Christian Woman's Board of Missions Thursdays at 2 p. m. WILLIAM ALPHIN, Pastor. A. G. NELSON, Clark. BUY YOUR COAL NOW. Richmond Lump $4.00; Lexington Lump, $4.00; Cherokee Lump, $4.50; Cherokee Nut, $4.00> Diamond Block, $4.50; Semi-Anthracite Lump, $6.50. All of our coal is deep shaft. It not as represented, send it back. PAYNES' COAL & FEED CO., 1930 Highland Avenue. Home Phone East 4132-Bell phone East 559. Office: 1902½ Vine St. ARGENTINE, KANSAS. By Mrs. Ophelia Jackson. Leo Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith, is convalescent after a very severe attack of pneumonia.... Little Martha DeVault is improving after a recent illness.... The Sacred Concert given at St. Paul A. M. E. Church on last Sunday evening by the Choir and Choral society was very good and largely attended. Miss Thelmia Watts of Kansas City sang "Oh Perfect Day," which was well received. Several visitors attended the concert, among them Mrs. H. A. Watts and Mrs. Mable Carpenter of Kansas City, Mo.... Rev. Harris left for Lawrence Tuesday morning to attend the funeral of Rev. Brooks. He will go from there to Wichita to attend the annual conference.... The report for the year for St. Paul A. M. E. Church was read Sunday night, September 24. Every department of the Church showed an increase over previous years and over $1,500 was raised throughout the year....Mr. Archie Elliott, who fell from a building a few weeks ago and was severely injured, is able to be out.... A very enjoyable and indeed a surprise party was given by the choir and choral society of St. Paul for Mrs. Ophelia Jackson at their residence on Barber avenue Thursday evening. It was quietly gotten up and was a surprise in every respect because Mrs. Jackson had no idea of it at all. The evening was spent very pleasantly. A program was rendered consisting of a solo by Miss Thelmia Watts, solo by Dr. Davis, solo by Elmer Jackson, instrumental solo by Mrs. Jackson, and choruses by the choral. A repast of ice cream and nut caramel cake was served and at 11 o'clock they departed for home, happy that the surprise was highly appreciated by their directress.... A birthday party was given for her husband, Mr H. D. Austin, by Mrs. Austin on last Tuesday evening at their residence on 37th and Barber avenue. Many friends congratulated Mr. Austin and wish him many happy returns of the day. FORD'S HAIR POMADE MAKES HARSH KINNY SOTHER, MORE PLUMBLE ENDER TO COMB AND PUT UP THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT PRICE $25 AND 50$ A BOTTLE FORD'S HAIR STRAIGHTENER NO. 022 STRAIGHTENS THE HAIR BY ROLLING IT TWENTY FOUR BRASS ROLLS BEAT AND ENDER THING WE KNOW OF TO STRAIGHT HAIR PRICE $1.50 PATENTED LOCKING DEVICE FOR BUILDING TEETH TIGHT FORD'S PATENT TWO PIECE SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER COMB NO. 023. YOU HEAT THE CHOOSE THE COOK AND SAVING BURNING AND SOILING THE COMB RETAINS HEAT LONGER, PRICE $1.50 NO. 023$. TEETH IN THIS COMB ARE MADE OF ELEMENTAL MATERIAL AND HELD BY A PATENT FERULE. SHOULD THE TEETH BECOME LOOSE, TURN THE FERULE BY TWISTING THE HANDLE AND THIS WILL PRESS THE SLEEVE UP TIGHTLY AGAINST THE TEETH AND MOLD THE FIRMLY. PRICE $1.25 FORD'S LARGE BRASS HAIR STRAIGHTENER COMB NO. 024 WORKING NICKEL PLATED, LARGE AND VERY STRONG KNANET BODY THE MACHINE'S SPECIAL LOCKING PRICE HOLDS THE HANDLE WITHOUT SOLDERING PRICE $1.00 FORD'S SMALL BRASS FORD'S MEDIUM SIZED BRASS SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER COMB NO. 025 A GOOD AND SERVICEABLE COMB FOR THE MONEY PRICE $50* ALL OUR GOODS WAREHOLDER AS DESCRIBED OR MONEY REFUNDED. FOR SALE BY YOUR REALER, OR DIRECT FROM US UPON RECEIPT OF PRICE. IN WESTING DIRECT, SEND MONEY BY POST OR EXPRESS MONEY ORDER. OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 46 W.KINZIE ST. CHICAGO,ILL. BOTH TIME AND MONEY SAVED AT Fall Shoes, but have you thought about a pair of You will find one of the Neatest Lines of Shoes in Kansas City. One finds it a pleasure to trade at Crossett's. True Courtesy and Service to Patrons Go with Every Pair SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH. Ladies and Gents Furnishing Store CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN ALSO AUTO DIRECTORY 7-Passenger Automobile. As a pleasure car The Clipper has no equal. Driven by Owner. 24-hour. Stick this near your telephone. W. H. HUBBELL Bell Phone East 2013 Home Phone East 2239 NEW SEVEN-PASSENGER CAR FOR HIRE MME. A. MOORE, TEACHER OF PIANO and VOICE Also directress for the Dixie Jubilee Singers For Engagements, Phone Bell Grand 3319-W. FORD'S ROYAL WHITE SKIN LOTION MAKES THE SKIN LOOK WATER WITH SOON AS IT PUT ON EXTREME FOR PIMPS, ROUGH SKIN AND LOCAL SKIN DISEASES PRICE 25$ A BOTTLE FORD'S PATENT TWO PIECE SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENING COMB NO. 023, YOU HEAT THE ROOT, NOT THE COMB THUS SAVING BURNING RETAINING HEN LONGER, PRICE $150 NO. 023'S TEETH IN THIS COMB ARE MADE OF SEPARATE PIECES OF BRASS, MONITored ON ASH STEEL ROOF AND HELD BY A PATENT TERMULE. SHOULD THE TEETH BECOME LOSS, TURN THE PERCULLE THUS THAT THE HANDLE AND THIS WHILE PRESS THE SLEEVE UP TIGHTLY AGAINST THE TEETH AND HOLD THEM FIRMLY. PRICE $125 FORD'S LARGE BRASS SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENING COMB NO. 022, WOODEN HANDLE LARGE AND VERY STRONG, MAKING A GOOD AND SERVICIABLE COMB FOR NIPHN AND NAPPAH MAIN NICKEL PLATED, PRICE $100 BRASS SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENING COMB NO. 022, WOODEN HANDLE LARGE AND VERY STRONG, MAKING A GOOD AND SERVICIABLE COMB FOR NIPHN AND NAPPAH MAIN NICKEL PLATED, PRICE $100 SHAMPOO AND HAIR STRAIGHTENING COMB NO. 022, WOODEN HANDLE LARGE AND VERY STRONG, MAKING A GOOD AND SERVICIABLE COMB FOR NIPHN AND NAPPAH MAIN NICKEL PLATED, PRICE $100 FORD'S HAIR PRESSER NO. 028 NICKEL PLATED, STEEL FRAME, HOLD BRAZE MORE WITH SERVICIABLE PRICE $50 REFUNDED. RECEIPT OF OR EXERCISE MONEY ORDER: W CO. 46 W.KINZIE ST. CHICAGO, IL. MONEY SAVED AT W. L MARTINS 1318 East 18th Street ODS NOW ON DISPLAY Announcement Announcement Dear Sir: Of course you are thinking about your but have you thought of SHOES at 1005 Main Street (a very handy location) If the Neatest Lines of Shoes in Ken- s it a pleasure to trade at Crossett's. Service to Patrons Go with Every Pair Rooms to Rent FOR RENT. FURNISHED APARTMENTS in single or in two room suites. Strictly modern. 1206 Highland avenue. Bell phone East 3537M. Mrs. V. L. Heuston. FOR RENT—Furnished, strictly modern, steam heat. Fred Manuel, 820 Jefferson Ave. Bell phone, Main 2257. For Rent—A neat front room furnished; strictly modern. Bell phone, East 2047J or Main 2550, between 12th and 15th street car lines on Woodland. For rent—Four room cottage, 2639 Highland avenue. Modern $15.00. Bell phone East 4139Y. FOR RENT—Strictly modern 6-room apartment; rent reasonable. Bell phone, 2507 East. ```markdown ``` We are the largest manufacier of colored women's hair, and we can introduce our goods we are sending for your lace book, the styles for colored women, in the latest hair dressing. Every colored woman should have a guarantee every article we sell or money refunded. All hair will position only stand double and washing the same as your own. We manufacture a STRAIGETEN-MERCURY extra heavy back, absolutely the best and most serviceable made, fully guaranteed, providing the low price of 89 cents we give a lamp cup free. Send your order for this straightening comb today A FULL LINE of Hair Brushes, Nets and Toilet Articles is illustrated and can be bought for less than offered elsewhere. Send two-cnt stamp for book today AUTHENTIC WANTED. ROMANIA HAIR COMPANY, 181-187 Park Row. New York PLEASE ADDRESS ANSWER TO DEPT. 10 Whenever you are in Kansas City to the store will acquaint you with all that is best and most desirable in fall and winter attire Emery, Bird, Thayer Co. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. CLARENCE CAMERON WHITE Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1916 COMING! NEW HABERDASHERY R. L. Hopkins. WHITE-WOOD WHITE-WOOD DRUG STORE THE QUALITY STORE. Nineteenth and Vine Sts. (Transfer Point). Fresh drugs and pure chemicals. Prescriptions are specialty. Our prescription department is one of complete in the city and is in charge of graduate, exp care-taking and registered pharmacists. Other sund sodas sell at the same price, but don't have that m fruity taste. Come where your nickles and dimes have the m PHONES—HOME EAST 2293, BELL E. 641 Bell Phone, Grand 2626 Home Phone, Ma Fresh drugs and pure chemicals. Prescriptions and sodas a specialty. Our prescription department is one of the most complete in the city and is in charge of graduate, experienced, care-taking and registered pharmacists. Other sundaes and sodas sell at the same price, but don't have that refreshing fruity taste. Come where your nickles and dimes have the most cents. PHONES—HOME EAST 2293, BELL E. 641. --- Mr. R. L. Hopkins wishes to announce that he has aadded to his cleaning, pressing and tailoring business a first-class line of gents' furnishings such as Arrow Brand Shirts and Collars, Ties, Suspenders, Hosiery, etc. YOUR INSPECTION INVITED Bell Phone East 1207J DRUG STORE chemicals. Prescriptions and sodas are a department is one of the most in charge of graduate, experienced, pharmacists. Other sundaes and, but don't have that refreshing les and dimes have the most cents. EAST 2293, BELL E. 641. Home Phone, Main 3522 EDWARD LIGHT CO. Wholesale dealers in UP-TO-DATE HOUSE-LIGHTING FIXTURES and SUPPLIES at Reasonable Prices. Estimates given on Fixtures for new houses. Better buy now before prices go higher. See our display room at 1303 GRAND AVENUE Electric Reading Lamps to cheer up your home, from $3 up. The Password Seer Degen e ree a ie tie erence ‘he tables were turned. T laughed outright us I realized it. ‘There, back In the timber, ut w lonely spot whieh few would visit or pass, I had left a Stalwart Mexican soldier tied hand and foot. Certainly 1 was safe from Ais pursuit until morning. The way It had cone about was this: For several days T had been to- cuted xt Mayena with the United States troops. 1 was taking photo. graphs for a series of magazine ar- tletes and had become quite well ae quainted with Lieutenant Harney, Ros: alter. Before coming to Mayen T had been for a week at Pulza. ‘There Thad met Misx Wentworth and ber family, The tnpression made upon me by Miss Wentworth was a insting one, When Lieutenant Itossiter stated that he Knew the Wentworths there was a friendly Hond established between us At once. It stifered a severe strain my lust hour in camp, however, Ros siter came to me looking anxious and distrustful. ’ “You told me you were going back to Pulza?” he said, and inquiringly. “ve got to.” T told hin. “I let all the views I took in Chihuahua there, counting on pleking them up ‘on my homeward-bound trip.” I did hot tell Rossiter, of course that Twas gind of an excuse, as 4 return would naturnily mean a secon meeting with the charming Mis Wentworth. SE got 1 letter about two hours since from Puiza,” suid the leutenant ei=. i | a i) Bl , H) | a 4 eS, see: mall oe OT ie Se BOS, w fa hot st pyr) i\ ~ ey PAN aw ye Jah ots SO SGU dfs —— i Swhich troubles me a good deal, You know the critlent condition of af. fairs nt Pulzw. 1 have received pri vate word tit the native commandant there Is about to be superseded by: his former predecessor, Mnceo, ‘That means trouble, danger for Mr. Went- worth anit his fasntly." “Why?? I asked, at once interested, 4. “Teeause Maceo is u rejected suitor of Miss Wentworth, and it was through Mr. Wentworth that he was relieved of his official duties, Under the old regime that would mean little, With the present factional lines nar- vowing, it xives to the treacherous and rovengefal Muceo the power of @ ty- rant, and he will exert It, “Anil your message to Mr. Went- worth would be? ‘ “£o leave Pulza at once. To delay is to be caught in a net. Even you will not find it easy to evade the guer- rillas, Within forty-elght hours. they may have their forces spread so that those south of the river here will be completely: shut in," “L think understand,” T said. “You ore very kiud to have all this consid- eration for the Wentworths, leuten- ent.” “Not when you retlect tht Tam en: gaged to iaery Miss Wentworth.” “Huh !—"" I barely suppressed the ut trance of amazement and disappoint ment. ‘Then dire was no hope for me fa that direction! It was rather a sorry mission I was undertaking for fa distinet rival. However, I summoned up alll my shanliness and started on my Journey. Tt was late the next day when a shot halted me. It eae from a uhleket My horse fell, and before T could get out from under him a brawny Mexiean wearing te insurrectionist uniform was at my side, his carbine leveled. He had the drop on me, and (t wa: sure death to make a move to resis or escape, He bound my arms with « belt, ted a lurtat about my waist making me understund that T was 1 prisoner und considered us a spy, an hound for his camp ten miles ahead he mounted his horse. 1 had som: rough tramping to do. Tt was well on towards dark wher we came to a little settlement. euptor, boastfully parading me, rod to the general store nnd celebrate A heroism by being helped to hal #8 dozen strovg drinks. Supplied wit ® bottle of the stuff, he resumed hi journey, We had not gone two mile when [noted ix drooping pore. Ove come with the strong liquor, he wa asleep in the saddle, ‘The horse halted to browse aud bi rider slept on, It was my chance, A a MT could work with sow ut may bonds. Soon I was fre ony tant Tt in bat his en i T took his Song ‘Then it was the , for there wi ei myse oy eb cit 3: & T passed no habitation, met nobody reece te arte tee wits ef ey ie forward. I had fancied L knew the route perfectly, ax Thad traversed it before, but at the end of an hour began to be confused, I lost the trait and did not catch It up again wnttl T eae ‘in sight of @ lonely Ittle cabin, It hold a light. Twas dexperately thirsty, and, glanelng In at the open window, ‘TL noted a water pall on the table and ‘the only Inmate of the desolate place, a little, undersized Mextean Ind, about five years of age, He was seated at the table eating porridge. As I stepped through the doorway he sprang nimbly to his feet aud faced me, 1 almost laughed outright. ‘The shrewd, Impish expression on the face of the youngster was absolutely irre sistible us instantly he threw up both hands. ‘Then, bis keen eyes looking me all over, he uitered two words: “Sundoval Muerte!" T nodded my head, He was reas sured. He went back to his porridge like one who has a duty to perform and hud recelved as safe-conduet, 1 drank at the pail and left the hut, turning the queer incident over in niy mind as I rode along. Suddenly, in Mextean: “Hult—who goes?” It was an Inspiration that came to me, looking down the barrel of a lev: sled carbine, At once there flashed a thought through my mind, ‘The par: ents of the Meslean lad had tutored him for a eritical oveasion—nonrestst- nee and the password, I gave it now, “Sandoval Muerte.” “Puss on—to the left, You are for the town?” I grunted an assent. Again 1 Iuighed—this time to drive away a shiver, for [had met a narrow graze. ‘The hour was lute when I reached Pulza. At once I visited the Went- worth domicile and had Mr. Went- worth out of bed, explaining matters, He looked serious, and decided on inv modiate action, Tt was wise, for a fow hours later the entire district was under insurrection domination, “My daughters," he introduced a little later, when he led two charming young ladies into the room, who had hastily dressed at the tidings of alarm My Miss Wentworth came forward witha Welcoming smile. As I spoke of Lieutenant Rossiter, the other Miss Wentworth looked anxious and re Heved. For the tirst time I knew there were two Misses Wentworth, and mine, the younger, was not a funcee. ‘That 1s, until we were over th border. We did not walt for daylight My meeting with the Mexican sentinel a few miles from town convinced me that the Insurreetionists were critleal Iy near. Our party was the last through the district yithout challenge ‘The doughty Meutenant had his El eanor and T my Daisy, who made me to her friends a hero complete, Got Lid at a Bargain. Mistress MeHaudem is a very keen hand at a bargain and few have ever been able to boast that they have “got the best o' her in a deal. ‘The other day she entered the village shop, where everything und anything, from a pair of spectacles down to an ounce of tea, can be purchased, and sald: “Wad ye sell me a sugar basin without the cover?” “Oh, aye,” said the merehant, who would seil the shoes off his feet at a profit, “Hoo muckle ts this, then?" inquired the customer, “That's a shullin’ complete.” “An’ whit for the basin withoot the ua? “Eleven pence.” “D'ye only tak’ a penny aff for the lo?" “Weel, the lid's no’ worth mair nor @ penny.” “Eh, that’s guid news,” ejaculated the lady, with a sigh of relief. “It’s jist the lid 0’ mine I've broken.” And 80 saylng she laid down a penny and walked off with the coveted lid before the astonished shopkeeper had time to utter a word. Basdlase: Waek. Tt is necessary, If one would avoid needless stains ‘and soll, to. train children to keep their hands off walls within and withont thelr own homes and those of other people. ‘The in- ovitable result of much play Is solled hands, and it were a neediess. cruelty to expect children to be always im- maculate, ‘These fingers, fresh from balls and tools and stone, and all man- ner of dust and muck, go thonghttessty against your front door, your light- colored weather-boarding, your portico pillars or railings, ‘They respect not the wallpaper on the stairway or else- where; out go the hands as thelr own- ors pass up and down, and in and out, and everywhere there are deface: ments. It is a simple matter to tutor your own children to refrain from this habit, but you suffer from other boys and’ girls as well, Mothers tn general should warn their children to keep hands off at home and in the homes of others. It is not pleasant to the tidy housekeeper to note, after a housecleaning, fresh finger marks waiting to greet the first caller. OT otk Otte Geen eke oe Bate ‘The salt mines of the Maramaros- Sziget district have been worked for centuries and many Americans who have toured this part of Hungary have visited the deep gullertes whose rock- crystal walls glitter as if studded with countless Iridescent Jewels as they re- flect the rays of the electric lights. One of the most interesting mines is that of Ronaszek which contains a great subterranean salt lake having a depth of nearly 300 feet. Proper indignation. An old couple had come up to Lon- don on a short holiday, and while looking round ene day they saw over shop a sign which read: ‘Yohn- son's Shirt Store.” “Well, I declare!” sald the old lady, “I wonder who tore it, and what do they want to tell people about it for? Can't his wife mend {t?"—London Mall, Healthy Disease, Laziness is a disease, declares one of the eminent doctors.” ‘Phe surpris- ing fact is that most of the victims of the diseaae always. look. so. dletseee ingly healthy.—Providence Journal THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30.1916 | ROUMANTA ot) and ifs People Mire ti amt ay bE ' ie. with ag = | 7 JROVAL PALACE AT BUCHAREST NEM. edad Daman sane anes destructive vortex of the u- Topean war, is presented in a commu- nication to the National Geographic society from James Howard Gore. He says: | A Roumanian village looks {ts best ‘in the spring, when nature, awakened from the sleep of winter, 1s green and fresh. At Easter the cottages have been whitewashed and the doors and window frames freshly painted in bright colors, The thatched roof has been put in order, and In Its entirety the cottage culls to mind the black-eyed country girls, with their glistening | strings of multi-colored beads around thelr necks. ‘The Rouwantan peasant women one nieets by the rondside are the fairest among the Balkan peoples, and this natural gift Is most apparent under conditions which are culeulated to en- hance it, Thelr dress is varied and elaborate, ‘The foundation Is a sort of | shift reaching to the ankle, the upper part embroidered with colored cotton, | Usually red or black, Over this 1s a | pettleont which, tn its material and de- | tail, retlects the taste and buying pow- [er of the wearer. On her head the peiisint wonan wears a scarf of cotton j tissue with silk stripes if her means | permit, and on guia occastons she puts jon a brighter kerchief, ornamented | with a frluge oF a row of spangles. Roth men and women seem purtial to | Naying their heads covered, even tn the louse; but It ts not regarded prop- | er to eat without removing the wat. eis peer ee cape te ne muss | hol so tenaciously to their distinetive costume as In the uplands of Rouma- | nin. It ts, im fact, almost an asset in nationalism, and its unifying influence | was emphasized some years ago by the | late dowager queen, widely known as Carmen Sylva, when she herself put on the native dees, What They Grow and Eat. | White whent Is the great staple of this agricultural country, the soll 1s equally adapted to corn (maize), and would be called upon for greater crops |if the demand should justify it. ‘The | ease with which corn can be converted | into substantia! food tempts the people to give hut little attention to the form im whiete te ts prepared for cousump- | tion, Polenta, a sort of mush, can be | made of cornmeal and water, and if | Ume or energy be lacking, It will be | placed on the table insufficiently | cooked, Although many belleve that this is the cause of the greater part of | the pellagra so common in Roumanta, it is dificult to persuade the peasant to exerelse greater cure in the prep- aration of polenta or substitute for it | some of the many palatable dishes that ean be made from corn, Cooking, unfortunately, ts not devel- oped as it should be, and the people seem to be content with simple fare [and a sameness that yields but little | to the seasons. Gardening is looked | upon as petty farming and not worthy of the uttention of a man who calls himself a farmer; In fuet, so few Rou: maniaus have gurdens that they are catied “bulgarii,” since the greater | part of the vegetables grown are in the hands of immigrant Bulgarians ‘The soll and climate of the country are adapted to as wide a range as can be found in our middie Atlantic states, | however. A succinct deseription of Roumania’s || boundaries is given in a bulletin is sued by the National Geogeaphie sock '| ety, ‘The two big western Jaws of Rou || mania—the provinces of Moldavia and "| Wallachia—look as if they had beer | set with gigantic, Jagged teeth by som "| titan deity of war. And these greai ‘| molars, the towering Carpathians seem ready to close down upon anc Flea Deadlier Than Tiger. I read an official report when Ia Bombay that during the preceding year tigers had killed 1,000 persons in India. You shudder at the fearful ravages of this king of jungles, But at the very time I was in Bombay the fleas were killing 300 persons every week in that one city alone. Nevertheless, the anti- eruelty crank would almost Jail you for daring to kill a poor, little, inno- cent flea. ‘Those fleas were riding up- on the backs of rodents and depositing the devastating bubonic plague in thousands of homes throughout Indl ‘The insignificant and negligible thing called a flea yesterday has today re- placed the tiger and the deadly cobra as the vast menace to 300,000,000 souls ie India. “T’ve got a big notion to quit the ho- tel business!” declared the landlord of the Petunia tavern. “What with pro- visions higher than m cat's back und climbing every minute, and the drum- mers yelling like sturved dragous for the best ou the market, and guests kdeking about this, that and the other Hle Burdens. bite from Austria-Hungary’s domain the rich region known as Transylvanla, jwith an area of 21,000 square miles. Passes on West Frontier. From Verelorova in the southwest, where the Danube rushes through the Kazan defile out of Hungary and be- comes the southern boundary of Rou- manta, to that point in a northeasterly direction where the three frontiers of Russia, Roumania und Bukowina meet is 300 miles in an airline, but following the crest of the Carpathians along the devious International boundary _be- tween western Roumania and eastern Hungary the distance Is more than 500 miles, This line is pierced at several points by passes and swift-flowing riv- ers which break through that rocky wall; but, generally speaking, the mountains, which are known as the ‘Transylvania Alps and which at some places attain an altitude of more than 8.000 feet, form a great rampart for Hungary, as the eastern slopes Into Roumania are much more precipitous than those leading westward down the fertile Hungarian plain, ‘The most famous breaks tn this mountain wall are the previously men- tioned Kazan pass, which Is also known as the Gorge of the Iron Gates; the Roteturm pass, which follows the depression of the turbulent Atuta riv- er: the Borgo and Predeal passes, Railroad engineers have taken advan- tage of these natural gateways through the rocks, one of the most Important railways being that which connects the Roumunian capital, Bucharest, with Budapest, via Temesvar. It en- ters Roumania through the Kazan de- file. Roumania touches the northeastern corner of Serbin for a distance of 50 miles below the Iron Gate, the Danube forming the boundary line. To the east, beyond the Serbiun frontier town of Radievatz, the broad reaches of the river constitute the dividing line be- tween Bulgaria and Roumania. The northern (Romanian) bank of the great waterway Is lurgely fen land, Presenting n most desolate aspect. Nu- uiérous islands dot the bosom of the swift river, whose waters turn the wheels of many floating watermills moored along the bank in this part of Its course. Some twenty miles north- east of the Bulgariun railroad junction city of Rustehuek the international boundary ceases to follow the river, but breaks sharply to the southeust, reaching the Black sea at Baltchtk, ‘The northeastern boundary of Rou- mania is the River Pruth, which rises in the Carpathians beyend Czernowitz and flows in a southeusterly direction into the Danube ten miles below the important Roumantan city of Galatz. It Separates the province of Moldavian from the Russian province of Bessura- bia, a natural boundary of 330 miles. From the confluence of the Pruth with the Danube the larger river fs the Russo-Roumanian boundary to the {Black sea. ‘The Roumantan frontage from north to south on this great in- land’sen exceeds 360 mntles, It is manifest that the powerful peo- ple of this world are by no means nee- essarily noble, and that most modern kings, poor in quality, petty in spirit, conventional in outlook, controlled and Ibnited, fall fur short of kingship. Nev- ertheless, there is nobility, there Is kingship, or this earth 1s a dustbin and mankind but a kind of skin disease upon a planet. ‘The aristocrats are not at the high table, the kings are not enthroned, ,those who are enthroned are but pretenders and slmulacra, Kings of the vulgar; the real king and ruler Is every man Who sets aside the nalye passions and self Interest of the common llfe for the rule and service of the world—H, G. Wells. rel like skeletons having fits on tiled floors, and the young ladies that kind- ly consent to wait table for me squab- bling Uke catamounts over the merits of thelr respective fellers, and such a3 that, It Is enough to eradicate a person clear out of his mind, And what's vorse than all the rest is the way the lend pencils go, Every day or two I buy © new one, and next thing a guest registers with ft and then puts {t in his pocket, and I have to buy another. Dadburned {f I couldn't quit business and live on the savings In lead pen- fs!” PPR Sy STAR Donald, a boy of ten, had gone out to a purt of town distant from his home to observe the wonders on the show ground, including the free exhi- bitions given after the cireus parade, and ag a consequence missed bis noon ‘meal at home, for which his mother ‘reprimanded him gently, and suggested that he would have to eat a cold din- ner. “Oh, don't worry,” replied the lad, loftily. “Charlie and me stopped at a daring lunch.” * Nobility. SURGEONS IN SEA BATTLE Herculean Tasks That Were Faced In Great Naval Fight Off Jutland Bank. “During the battle of Jutland bank the naval surgeons performed a ter rible task,” writes the medical corre- spondent of the London ‘Times. He tells of the sudden emergency that confronted them, and the hasty trans- fer of stores and equipment from the sick bays above the armor to the fore and att distributing stations below it. “Soon in thelr station,” he continues, “they heard the booming of guns, and soon @ipre crept down to them the fuines BMthe exploding charges. From that tile the stations became the scones of flerce and terrible activity. “In one great ship bellying smoke filled the doctors’ rooms at the very moment when the streams of wounded began to flow down to them, adding suffocation to the thousand other per- Als of the work. ‘The ship reeled un- der pounding blows, she staggered in 8 dliiicult sea; the concussion of her guns was so great as to preclude the possibility of adequate surgical assist- Ance, Wearing gas masks, the doctors did what they could, bending thelr en- ergies selflessly to the great task, as Is the tradition of thelr calling. “In another ship an enemy shell de- stroyed the aft station utterly so that the whole work of relief fell on the remaining forward one, Hour after hour, without reck of time or exhaus- tion, the staff labored to overtake tts great task. Another ship was holed ‘and had her electric light cut off. ‘The medical station was in darkness; tt was foul with the gas fumes from the enemy shells; water poured in by the holes in the vessel's sides. Here, single- handed, a young naval surgeon tolled by the light of an electric torch until he was ordered to get his wounded away because the ship was sinking. “And this task he achieved so well that not a life was lost, The doctors wit- “hessed strange scenes. during these hours, and perhaps the strangest of all was that which followed the an- “ouncement that a German ship had gone down, for then all the wounded, {ncluding the man on the operating table, began to cheer.” Biggest Water Wagon. ‘The Russian duma has passed a bill making the suppression of vodka a permanent national policy. ‘The meas- ure prohibits the manufacture and sale of any beverage containing more than 1% per cent of alcohol. ‘This bars beer and light wines. “Under the difficult conditions of wartime,” says M. Bark, minister of finance, “we ventured to forego a huge drink revenue and thereby most clear- ly demonstrate that, with a return to peace, when the state exchequer re- covers all its former sources of reve- hue, and a sobered people fully devel- ops its greatly increused productivity in the penceful field of labor, Russia calmly and confidently will be able to live with a temperance budget.” ‘The Russian empire comprises one- seventh of the habitable globe. Its water wagon carries some 175,000,000 people, who, despite the enormous bur- dens of the costliest war of history, are Increasingly prosperous, more “ft” physically, morally and financially than ever before to serve their coun- try. Span: Wace Glin Watehinaba. In religion the Incas were fond of worshiping high places, fine views, and other striking natural objects, such as irregular boulders. waterfalls and springs; the wonders of the air and the sky, such as rain, thunder, the starry firmament, the moon, and, above all, the sun, In a cold, mountainous region like the central Andes, it was but natural that the sun, so essential to the rais- ing of crops and the comfort of shiv- ering humanity, should have been re garded as their chief divinity. Of literature, as such they neces: sarily had none. Their language was probably the Quichua. Mr. Hardy of our expedition, wao has been study- ing it, says that “for one who bas not learned it In childhood it is diffientt, because of the lack of any good gram- mar in either Spanish or English."— Hiram Bingham, In the National Geo- graphic Magazine. tin aes Sit eheikss aR Gite. Storks, according to some ancient writers (they can hardly be called au- thorities), are the most virtuous and domestic of birds. One of them, Friar Bartholomew, says: “While the female liveth, the male keepeth truly to her in nest. And if a male espy, in any wise, that the “emale hath broke spousehend, she shall no more dwell with him, but he beateth and striketh her with his bill, and slayeth her If he may.” The same writer remarks that storks, in thelr oversea migrations, are convoyed by crows, who “withstand with all their might fowls that hate storks.” An engaging characteristic attributed to these birds is that they “nourish their parents when oppressed with age.”—London Chronicle, Missing! A small girl, aged five, was studying intently a picture of the Ggrden of Eden, At Inst she sald, tn a perplexed voice: “But, mother, where is the carriage?” “Carriage!” exclaimed her mother in great surprise. “What can you mean, ‘dear? There was no carriage in the Garden of Eden.” “But,” remonstrated the child, “you told me that the Lord drove Adam and | Bve out of the Garden,” aan meen “How can you say you enjoy that woman's reading when she 1s 80 mo- | notonous?"* “I do enjoy it, Iam suffering trom insomnia.” Uncle Eben. “De man dat keeps his ear to de ground,” said Uncle Eben, “natchelly has to be keerful not to git tired o° Ustenin’ an’ go to sleep.” Physically Impossible. “The danger was 80 near me that my hair stood up on my head.” “Then you couldn't have had such « ‘dose shave.” Pretty Clothes for Small Maid Dui + » ae all Ln A i i) thal See q a ) i ty os i \ erg | bee \ me Little People Have Been Given Attention of the World's Greatest Designers. VELVET VERY MUCH IN FAVOR That Materlal Exceptionally Fashion- able, Though Many Others Are Dis- tinetly in Style—Some Hints for the Proper Costuming of he bébeeteiel: ‘There are mothers by the thousands who know not Lanvin, She may be a new perfime, an old wine or a race- horse, for all they care, but way out beyond the bounds of the post office, youngsters wear the things this gifted woman has designed. Unmarried, de- voted to her nieces and nephews and building for her family brood a spa- cious and artistic home near Paris, kind of heart and clever of brain, she has glorified the schoolgirl and put her stamp on the children of the world, ‘The older women will tell you she has done something greater than that; she has made the middle-aged woman look like the schoolgirl, antl that gives her the prestige of a sartorial alchem- ist, a brewer of magle. It is her verdict that the small girl shall wear small clothes. She has made tiny little frocks for kindergar- ten wear that button down the back and barely reach the knees. To xive a touch of gayety, she has embroidered baskets of roses on her frocks. She ignores the waistline and flares her little gowns straight out from shoulder to hem, In Black and ‘Light Colors. | Jenny does differently; she adopts black velvet for small girls and also takes up with taffeta fn the second saaceblag coldta Ge Alelet. mane eal at Back of Deep Blue Satin. Hat of Blue Velvet With High Crush Crown and Silver Bow in Front. lavender. These she girdies at a high waistline with smocking, cording, vel- vot ribbon and gold and silver cord. Paquin hag also taken up with juven- He costumery. She has reflected the thrill of romantie delight which the French give to thelr Scotch allies by turning out plaids and tartans that no ttle girl would be ashamed to wear to school. In all this costumery designed by Paris for juveniles, the skirts are short and full, the bodices slim and tight, the necks cut round and fished tn a simple manner, In materials, velvet 1s exceptionally fashlonable; 80 are taf- feta, silk, chiffon, Georgette crepe and the different weaves of army cloth. In the clothes that are not intended for the nursery there is a certain air of sophistication that has been lacking In American clothes for a decade or two. So much for the real youngster. What of her older sister who is going to boarding school or college?» Costuming the Schoolgirl. It 1s no slight task and cannot be accomplished in leisure moments—this arrangement of a schoolgit!'s ward- robe. ‘The wisest plan is to give her enough clothes to last until the Christ- eee SETS FOR BETWEEN-SEASONS | Hate and Scarfs of Velvet and Fur Provided to Wear With the | Tailor Made. Lovely sets, consisting of the hat and shaw! collarette or crush collarette, are featured in New York. These sets com- bine velvet with fur and will be ex- ceedingly smart worn with the demi- tailleur. A typleally youthful set uad a mushroom poke hat, the crown an extremely high, pufty tam effect in midnight blue velvet, while the brim was of old-rose cut wool. ‘The shoul- der shawl collarette was of velvet, and was lined with the cut wool, the top of which was folded back on the velvet, '| forming a sort of cuff effect and adding ‘touch of color. A tiny bunch of silk flowers In old rose Gnished the hat In front and formed the fastening of the collarette. Another very good-looking set con- sisted of a large sailor hit of mole color velvet, the brim bouud in mole: | skin, and the trimming being four moleskin buttons with gold curd loops, mas holidays and not attempt to dress her now for the entire year. ‘This, argues the mother Is too ex~ travagant a plan to put into practice, although it is good in theory, A little ‘experiment, however, will prove that ‘this really makes for economy. ‘There ‘are few adults who care to wear the same gown throughout ten months of the year, A woman may not want to keep abreast of the fashions, but no woman is guiltless of the desire to show her public that she knows what they are, ‘This feeling is far more potent In a young girl than in a grown-up. She cares not for quality nor quantity. She wants the Inst thing at the right mo- ment, If she Is compelled to wear tho same new frocks from October until May, she will rebel. The consequence is that she will worry her mother into. giving her some new frocks after the New Year, with her former ones still valuable, Therefore, try the system of giving her just enough to last her through the Christmas holidays, and take advantage of the reasonable prices of fashionable clothes at the shops. Making for Economy. It Is perhaps wiser to provide her with two one-piece frocks and a top coat than with a tailored suit so early in the season, The classroom frock which used to bother mothers’ minds so much is now simplified by the unl- versal fashion of separate flannel skirts, sweaters and shirt waists. ‘There are many schools in which the girls Insist upon wearing wash skirts throughout the season, but this is an extravagant fashion because of the laundry bill. ‘The preferred shirtwaist ts of silk instead of cotton, which calls for a bit more money in the beginning, but which saves more in the end. ‘The top coat seems to be essential. There are admirable new ones brought over from Paris and also designed in Frock of White Georgette Crepe With Flounce of Midnight Blue Satin, Skirt Fastened Down Back With White Velvet Buttons. Hood Collar Finished at Back With Silk Tassel. America. The smart ones have loose, cireular capes that flare away from a half-low, rolling collar, with a fasten ing on the side instead of in front. As for the one-piece frocks, they can be chosen in any color and material that the girl likes. ‘There must be one for afternoon and informal eve- ning wear, which the French designers make up in white or cream lace with colored satin or in Georgette crepe with satin, The Hats They Wear. One of the new hats for schoolgirls Is excessively good-looking, made of plaited black velvet, and silver braid. It Is a combination of the hats of sail- ors and ‘Chinese mandarins. France, you know, took hold of the Chinese in- fluence again as soon as she introduced the Louls XV fashions. ‘The embroldered hat has had its day, The colored felt hat, soft, silky felt, with a large, flopping brim and a soft, dented crown, will rival fudge us the schoolgir’s ehief delight. In deep pink, without a touch of any other color or trimming, it Is strongly de- sired. (Cor + by the Ae‘ ‘ows (Copyright, by .the MeClure Newspaper ranged from the crown center to the brim edge. The collarette of this set wus of the mutter type and combined the moleskin and mole velvet, Still another was of black velvet and striped hovelty fur that had a touch of yel- low in it; this was carried out on the hat in the form of a woven gold thread duck that formed the solitary central trimming, Braid Monograms, Here Is a new. quick and inexpensive way to letter household articles, Buy a five-cent card of old-fashioned rigk- rack braid in blue, pink or any destred shade. Draw your letters and securely fasten down one end of the braid, Now twist the braid so that all the points are toward the outside of the letter, then sew to the material. ‘This takes only a few minutes to do, and looks very well, especially on bath towels or other large articles.—-Woman's Home Companion. ———__—__ Flower Neckiet. ~| A charming fashion for small chil- r|dren of the smock-wearing age ls a +, [flower necklet to match the smock. By VICTOR REDCLIFFE (Copyright, 1916, by W. G. Chapman.) Judge John Hampden, portly, pleasant-faced, great-hearted, pointed his finger at a select corner of the cigar case. "Fish out those three for fifty," he ordered in his genial expansive way. "Do up a couple of dozen." "Birthday anniversary, Judge?" insinuated a legal acquaintance. "Nothing of the sort—just going to react an old friend." "Must be a favored one." "He is. I never married and he did. Sorry for him, but he's true blue. That's why I love him. Nothing too good for him. Twenty years square as a sentry to a faded, dictatorial scold. I fancy my twenty on the bench has been less iksome. Ah, me! so it goes, but I respect him for his idelity." Judge Hampden was speaking of an old and dear friend, indeed—Martin Overton. They had been schoolboys together. Both had fallen in love with the same girl. Neither had got her. The Judge had never married. Overton had wedded a spoiled beauty. Within a year he had learned his mis-take. Hers was a cross, crabbed nature. She became a tyro. For five years regularly Overton had come to the Judge to relate his troubles. During fifteen years, however, they had drifted apart. Now a telegram had come from a distant city where Over- Walter Caro Sat Bolt Upright. ron lived. It ran: "Must see you on urgent business. Will be with you at 8 p. m." And at 8 p. m., promptly in his handsome bachelor apartments the Judge sat at a groaning table awaiting his guest. Everything he could think of from favorite cigars to odd dishes he recalled Overton used to like was on the table. There was a ring at the door. The Judge fairly hugged the thin, haggard man who was shown into the room. Then he regarded him more closely and his face fell a trifle. If he had spoken out his real mind he would have said, "Overton, you make me feel old," for his guest seemed to have advanced years since last he had seen him. He was reserved and his lips twitched when the Judge asked him about his family. The Judge did not pursue the subject, but with a suppressed sigh decided that Mrs. Overton had not improved in her ways with the years. Overton threw off his shell of weariness as the meal progressed, however. No one could be long with jovial Judge Hampden without feeling the influence of his bright humor. "You spoke about business, Overton," observed the Judge finally. "Yes," nodded his guest. "I want you to loan me $10,000." "Certainly," bowed the Judge. He was somewhat surprised at the largeness of the amount, but he instantly drew out his check book and fountain pen. "There you are, Overton," he added lightly. "Now to have an old time friendly talk with you." A spasm indefinable crossed Overton's face. The devotion, the confidence expressed in the act of the Judge seemed to touch him deeply. Not a reference did his considerate friend rake to the use intended for the money, to security, repayment. Absolute trust was indicated. "I want to arrange for your room, Overton," spoke Hampden, as, after an hour's chat, he arose from the table. He led Overton into his little library and saw him ensconced in its easiest chair. "I shouldn't be gone long. Meantime, entertain yourself. There's the magazines and—see here, did I ever show you my record book? All the cases on which I have passed. There are some famous ones there. Sort of a fad of mine to keep full particulars." The Judge placed a heavy thick book on a little stand before his guest. The latter turned over its pages indifferently at first. Then his interest awakened. As the Judge had said, the book contained the photographs, the criminal record and the life history of those who from time to time had come before him on trial. Overton turned over the pages casually. Some of the cases were noted ones and he recalled their newspaper publicity in the past. "Suppressed" read a sheet lightly laid over a heavier one. As he removed the first he sat WHAT FARMERS OWE to the BEE Colonies of honey makers necessary to fruit raising because they are the chief fertilizing agent : : And there can be nothing more tempting than hot biscuit and honey for breakfast on a crisp winter morning F bees on the ground that they damage the ripe fruit. The crop so quickly decreased in size, however, that the fruit men were glad enough to have the bees back again. There is a well-established belief that bees puncture grapes in order to extract the sweet juice, but the fallacy of this belief has been proved beyond a doubt. Ripe fruit has been placed inside a beehive, with thousands of the insects present, but it has not been molested. It is true that if hornets or birds make holes in grapes, pears or other ripe fruit, the bees will feed on the juice which is exuded. In point of fact, the jaws of the honey bee are so made that it would be unable to bite into or otherwise make holes in fruit, even if it had a will to do so. bees on the ground that they damage the ripe fruit. The crop so quickly decreased in size, however, that the fruit men were glad enough to have the bees back again. There is a well-established belief that bees puncture grapes in order to extract the sweet juice, but the fallacy of this has been proved beyond a doubt. Ripe fruit has been placed inside a beehive, with thousands of the insects present, but it has not been molested. It is true that if hornets or birds make holes in grapes, pears or other ripe fruit, the bees will feed on the juice which is exuded. In point of fact, the jaws of the honey bee are so made that it would be unable to bite into or otherwise make holes in fruit, even if it had a will to do so. Orchards in which bees are present in large numbers are almost always much more productive than those in which only a few bees are to be found and many apple growers are now establishing apiaries in or near their orchards. It is not necessary to have the hives actually under the trees and it may be better to have them in an adjoining field if the orchard is to be cultivated, as otherwise the hives might be in the way and the horses stung. Bees seem to have an instinctive dislike for horses and will even attack the bee keeper sometimes if he starts to work in the bee yard when the odor of horses is upon his clothing. Beekeeping is not to be recommended to hostlers. Orchards in which bees are present in large numbers are almost always much more productive than those in which only a few bees are to be found and many apple growers are now establishing apiaries in or near their orchards. It is not necessary to have the hives actually under the trees and if it may be better to have them in an adjoining field if the orchard is to be cultivated as otherwise the hives might be in the way and the horses stung. Bees seem to have an instinctive dislike for horses and will even attack the bee keeper sometimes if he starts to work in the bee yard when the odor of horses is upon his clothing. Beekeeping is not to be recommended to hostlers. To the orchardist the honey and wax which he gets from his bees are merely by-products. An extra yield in fruit is what he is after. And he gets it, as may be judged from an instance cited by one of the state experiment stations. It seems that two orchards situated in the same part of the country were cultivated in exactly the same manner and had the same kinds of trees. Yet one was prolific and the other a failure. When the experiment station was appealed to, the trouble was diagnosed as a lack of bees to pollinate the flowers. "You are wrong," the answer was flashed back, "for there are no bees in either orchard." The inspector was not convinced, however, and after a search he found a very strong colony of bees in a fallen log in one corner of the bearing orchard. Bees were immediately installed in the other orchard by the owner, and as a result he netted nearly $4,000 the next season—pretty good interest on an investment of $15 or $20 in bees. Most people do not know that an apple blossom requires to be fertilized several times in order to produce the best fruit, but this is a fact. Moreover, the blossoms of some trees must be pollinized from another source if fruit is to be set. The work is done largely by honey bees, although wild bees and other insects help out to some extent. Once, as a test case, 2,586 apple blossoms were covered in order to keep the bees away, and only three apples matured. Of course, the bee does not pollinize the blossoms purposely. She is in search Our Opportunity By JOHN BARRETT, in the Review of Reviews. These are the times when everybody should be studying the twenty American republics lying south of the United States. These are the days of unprecedented and legitimate opportunity in Latin America for the commercial and financial interests of this country. This present year should be the beginning of a new epoch in the material, social and political relations of North and South America. The next ten years are going to be "all American" years. All America is to attract the attention of all Americans. This new development is inevitable. The cause is found in the natural wealth, resources and potentialities of Central and South America, their actual commerce and trade, their remarkable progress during recent years, together with the unceasing propaganda of the Pan-American union, which was at first even ridiculed and little appreciated, but is now generally valued and recognized. The occasion of this new interest at this moment is the European war and the emphasis it has placed upon the geographical segregation and commercial solidarity of the nations of the western hemisphere. Consider Latin America in any phase one prefers, and it is worthy of keen interest. Let us first look at it geographically and physically. We see twenty countries ranging in area from little Salvador, with less than 8,000 square miles, or smaller than Vermont, up to mighty Brazil, with 3,200,000 square miles, or greater than the United States proper with Great Britain thrown in! In Most people do not know that an apple blossom requires to be fertilized several times in order to produce the best fruit, but this is a fact. Moreover, the blossoms of some trees must be pollinized from another source if fruit is to be set. The work is done largely by honey bees, although wild bees and other insects help out to some extent. Once, as a test case, 2,586 apple blossoms were covered in order to keep the bees away, and only three apples matured. Of course, the bee does not pollinize the blossoms purposely. She is in search -:- Our Opportunity In Latin America -:- By JOHN BARRETT, in the Review of Reviews. These are the times when everybody should be studying the twenty American republics lying south of the United States. These are the days of unprecedented and legitimate opportunity in Latin America for the commercial and financial interests of this country. This present year should be the beginning of a new epoch in the material, social and political relations of North and South America. The next ten years are going to be "all American" years. All America is to attract the attention of all Americans. This new development is inevitable. The cause is found in the natural wealth, resources and potentialities of Central and South America, their actual commerce and trade, their remarkable progress during recent years, together with the unceasing propaganda of the Pan-American union, which was at first even ridiculed and little appreciated, but is now generally valued and recognized. The occasion of this new interest at this moment is the European war and the emphasis it has placed upon the geographical segregation and commercial solidarity of the nations of the western hemisphere. Consider Latin America in any phase one prefers, and it is worthy of keen interest. Let us first look at it geographically and physically. We see twenty countries ranging in area from little Salvador, with less than 8,000 square miles, or smaller than Vermont, up to mighty Brazil, with 3,200,000 square miles, or greater than the United States proper with Great Britain thrown in! In "This poet says love is all in all." "That's the poetical view of life," answered the practical person. "Yes?" "Married life is 50 per cent love and 50 per cent upkeep." His Money Gone. Omar—Did you ever experience what might be termed a feeling of "goneness?" Heiny—Yes; I once backed a race horse that "also ran." bolt upright as though driven thus by some sudden electric shock. His face ashen, his eyes haunted with a devastating fear and horror, he read of the private arrest of Cora Durand, twenty-five, adventures, arrested for robbing an admirer, a man of wealth, of a large sum of money by drugging him. She had been in an English prison and had come to the United States as a new field for further victims. Her methods were given in detail, her description perfectly outlined, even to a tiny scar on the lobe of one ear. Overton arose to his feet rigid, his eyes fixed on the volume lying open with the photograph of a regally beautiful woman looking up at him. Then he drew from his pocket—its counterpart more recent of taking though it was, there could be no doubt that the portraits were of one and the same woman. The one he had taken from his pocket fell from his nerveless hand. He allowed it to lie unheeded at his feet. A white horror was in his face and he acted as though impelled by some automatic force. He drew the check the Judge had given him from his pocket, placed it on the table, proceeded noiselessly to the hallway entrance to the apartments, selected his overcant and left the place. Judge Hampden was lost in amazement when he returned. His friend was gone. He questioned the servant, but the latter had not witnessed the departure of Overton. Then the Judge noticed that the hat of his guest was gone from the hall tree. It was when the Judge discovered the photograph which Overton had unconsciously left behind him and noticed the record book open at its counterpart, that his keen judicial skill was called into action. The abandoned cheek, the sudden departure of Overton showed that some vast, startling impulse had swayed him to sudden action not anticipated. The Judge formed a ready theory and it was the correct one. Overton, the man of probity, had in some mysterious way come under the shren-like influence of Cora Durand. Perhaps weedied of a nugging, loveless wife he had desperately determined to get what money he could and fly with the clever adventures. The accidental discovery of the real character of the woman had come like a shock, causing him to recoil in horror from the step he so nearly had taken. The Judge was too thorough a logician to intermiddle where sure destiny was working out a problem for his tempted, misguided friend. No explanation came to him from Overton, none was sought. Sorrowfully the Judge reflected over the weakness, almost crime, of the man he so esteemed. With relief and hope he incidentally learned that Overton was pursuing the even tenor of his way, and one day he saw the notice of the death of Mrs. Overton in the newspaper. He met Overton after that. Just once the latter referred to the past. "Friend of the years," he said, clasping the hand of the Judge and looking him straight in the eyes, "under your roof there came to me the redemption of my life. I am content when I recall that I made the last years of my life attentive and loyal to the wife I never loved. I shudder when I think of the yawning abyss into which I so nearly sank, bringing disgrace and sorrow to the two children who are now so dear to me!" How Alcohol Is Made. Most people when informed of the fact that alcohol is being manufactured from sawdust immediately assume that the product is the so-called "wood alcohol" of commerce. This is not the case, and a statement of the two processes of manufacture makes the distinction clear. True wood or methyl alcohol is produced by the destructive distillation of wood. Cordwood is placed in a retort which is heated until the gases and liquids are driven off and only charcoal remains. The liquid distillate is then divided into components, one of which is wood alcohol. In the production of ethyl alcohol from sawdust the process at certain stages is very similar to that used with grain, molasses, potatoes, etc., and the product is exactly the same. The sawdust is cooked with dilute acid to produce sugars from the wood substance. These sugars are leached out and the liquor is fermented and distilled, producing grain or ethyl alcohol.-American Lumberman. Correct Thought First. Social reform is not to be secured by noise and shouting, by complaints and denunciation, by the formation of parties or the making of revolutions, but by the awakening of thought and the progress of ideas. Until there be correct thought, there cannot be right action and when there is correct thought right action will follow. Power is in the hands of the masses of men. What oppresses the masses is their own ignorance, their own shortsighted selfishness—Henry George. Thought That Helps In old days there were angels who came and took me by the hand and led them away from the city of destruction. We see no white-winged angels now. But yet men are led away from threatening destruction; a hand is put into theels, which leads them forth gently toward a calm and bright land, so that they look no more backward, and the hand may be a little child's.-George Elliot. Dogs Beared for Human Food Among the Chinese a particular species of dog is said to be reared for the table. It is a small dog of a greyhound shape, with a muzzle much more elongated than in terriers. The flesh of black dogs is preferred to that of animals of any other color on account of the greater amount of nutriment the black dogs are supposed to possess. She Always Cares A man gets after a while so that he doesn't care so very much for appearances, as long as things work all right and don't bother him, but we don't suppose a woman ever reaches the point where she can be happy unless all the silver is marked sterling.—Columbus (O.) Journal. THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916 ARMERS in this country are just coming to realize the debt which they owe to the honey bee. It has long been understood, of course, that this busy little insect fertilizes the blossoms of apple and other fruit trees and so helps to increase the crop, yet the bee has seldom been credited with doing so much good as is actually the case. Indeed, in times past some fruit growers have sought to get rid of the are to be now es- sards. It is under the in an ad- activated as may and the instinctive k the bee- in the bee its clothing, to hostlers, k which he products. An r. And he istance cited It seems the part of by the same BEEKEEPERS AT A S of Reviews. body should publics lying the the days opportunity in and financial present year touch in the of North all Ameri- tation the atten- development is the natural of Central commerce and ing recent propaganda is at first but is now the occasion the Euro- placed upon special soil- nemisphere. the one pre- est. Let us actually. We from little miles, or brazil, with the United own in! In all, they spread over near or three times the coun- States! They contain longer and more navig- more fertile, and climate of the United States. Noting the population, starts the small end of habitants, and Brazil to Latin America supports population of 75,000,000 reproduction faster than United States. When the Europe starts in after Panama canal is in full peaceful Europe, this to- pass that of the big sis- ica. We are almost aston- Latin-American commerce many of the southern re- if some other influences. Last year the twenty- United States, through s- ity, pushed up the total the huge sum of nearly divided almost equally ports, with the actual favor. Argentina, for ex- vigorous and prosperous nine millions of souls, o- merce valued at the sum 000, which makes an an- head. Chile, a land of a A BATCH Objectionable. "It was rather impolite for you to snort when Jobbles pulled out his tin watch." "Oh, I wasn't expressing contempt for his timepiece." "No?" "I simply don't see any excuse for pulling out a tin watch with a flourish." By ROBERT H. MOULTON. A EXPERT HANDLER RARELY STUING CATCHES QUEEN SAVES SWARM CATCHES QUEEN, SAVES SWATCH BEEKEEPERS AT A STATE AMARY DEMONSTRATION BEEKEEPERS AT A STATE APARTY DEMONSTRATION of nectar from which to make honey, but all unconsciously she brushes the pollen from one flower and carries it along to another, thus carrying on her part of nature's plan. The value derived from the cross fertilization of blossoms in this way is probably much greater than that of all the honey and wax made by the sum total of all the bees in the country. taking honey out escape is used, what is going on. The best way colony or two fro neighborhood, but shipped by expire by the pound if It is practically impossible to grow cucumbers in the greenhouse unless bees are depended upon to fertilize the blossoms, and so the market gardeners are obliged to yield tribute to this useful insect. Even in the dead of winter, with snow drifts six feet high outside, thousands of bees are to be found flying around in the great glass houses where cucumbers are produced for the exclusive winter trade. It is true that the bees get but little nectar from the blossoms and have to be fed on sugar sirup, but they accomplish the purpose of transferring pollen from one flower to another. Of course this work might be done artificially. That is, a man might go from one blossom to another with a small brush and transfer the pollen, but the process would be tedious and too expen- all, they spread over nearly 9,000,000 square miles, or three times the connected area of the United States! They contain mountains higher, rivers longer and more navigable, valleys wider and more fertile, and climates more varied than those of the United States. Noting the population, we find that Costa Rica starts the small end of the list with 400,000 inhabitants, and Brazil tops it with 20,000,000. All Latin America supports today approximately a population of 75,000,000, which is increasing by reproduction faster than is the population of the United States. When the new emigration from Europe starts in after the war, and when the Panama canal is in full use by the shipping of a peaceful Europe, this total may soon overtake and pass that of the big sister nation of North America. We are almost astonished by the figures of Latin-American commerce. They make us respect many of the southern republics and peoples, even if some other influences may not be so favorable. Last year the twenty southern neighbors of the United States, through sheer strength and capacity, pushed up the total of their foreign trade to the huge sum of nearly $3,000,000,000. This was divided almost equally between exports and imports, with the actual balance of trade in their favor. Argentina, for example, with an ambitious, vigorous and prosperous people numbering about nine millions of souls, conducted a foreign commerce valued at the surprising total of $900,000,000, which makes an average of about $100 per head. Chile, a land of achievement and promise. BATCH OF SMIL all, they spread over nearly 9,000,000 square miles, or three times the connected area of the United States! They contain mountains higher, rivers longer and more navigable, valleys wider and more fertile, and climates more varied than those of the United States. Noting the population, we find that Costa Rica starts the small end of the list with 400,000 inhabitants, and Brazil tops it with 20,000,000. All Latin America supports today approximately a population of 75,000,000, which is increasing by reproduction faster than is the population of the United States. When the new emigration from Europe starts in after the war, and when the Panama canal is in full use by the shipping of a peaceful Europe, this total may soon overtake and pass that of the big sister nation of North America. We are almost astonished by the figures of Latin-American commerce. They make us respect many of the southern republics and peoples, even if some other influences may not be so favorable. Last year the twenty southern neighbors of the United States, through sheer strength and capacity, pushed up the total of their foreign trade to the huge sum of nearly $5,000,000,000. This was divided almost equally between exports and imports, with the actual balance of trade in their favor. Argentina, for example, with an ambitious, vigorous and prosperous people numbering about nine millions of souls, conducted a foreign commerce valued at the surplus total of $900,000,000, which makes an average of about $100 per head. Chile, a land of achievement and promise A BATCH OF SMILES ATE AVIARY DEMONSTRATION only 9,000,000 square miles, located area of the United mountains higher, rivers wide, valleys wider and more varied than those we find that Costa Rica the list with 400,000 in- it with 20,000,000. All today approximately a which is increasing by is the population of the new emigration from the war, and when the use by the shipping of a may soon overtake and er nation of North Amer- ished by the figures of e. They make us respect bubbles and peoples, even may not be so favorable, southern neighbors of the meer strength and capac- of their foreign trade to $3,000,000,000. This was between exports and im- balance of trade in their sample, with an ambitious, people numbering about conducted a foreign com- versing total of $200,000. average of about $100 per achievement and promise, from the frame wha the liquid by centrifug from milk the hives us can usually have less lying on the states on the Pa- ing an area than that Panama or merce pro Evan B. story cone in New A. A chara in rooms pressed w had one pane. Meanwhile went into acter sat advantage. One day however, "Hello," "Hello," town char "Just put windows, News. Seventy said to be OF SMILES And More Too. "Are you still looking for that honest man?" asked the stranger. "I am," replied Diogenes. "Can you help me find him?" "No, I can't do that, but I can quote you a very low price on oil for your lantern, provided you buy it in large quantities. You will probably need at least ten barrels." sive to be feasible. It has to be done in green-houses where strawberries are grown, for when bees are used the fruit is always misshapen, but the winter strawberries sell for a dollar or two a plait! Perhaps it may be said without getting anybody into trouble that the free use of water by spraying makes possible some of the remarkable exhibitions which bees occasionally give. Water is not always used, by any means, but when it is the bees are rendered surprisingly tractable and docile. There are no bee tamers, however, who are not stung at times. Indeed, they may be stung very often, but they are injured to the experience and do not even wince. And, of course, an experienced beekeeper learns how to handle bees without making them angry. Furthermore, some bees are much gentler than others. Many times it is a good plan to kill the queen in a cross colony and replace her with a young queen from a quiet colony. Yet the cross bees are likely to be among the best honey producers in the apiary. Many farmers fail to succeed with bees simply because they neglect to learn anything about their management. It is true that bees do not require a great amount of attention and do best when left alone most of the time. Yet there are certain things which have to be done just at the right time and in Just the right way. These are the few things that the farmer should know about. In early spring, for example, the bees may easily starve to death for lack of stores, although they may have come through the winter safely. In that event they must be fed on sugar sirup if no honey is available. Equal amounts of sugar and water may be used and it is best to have the water warmed, but the sugar should never be melted on the stove as it is likely to be burned. The sirup may be given in one of several different kinds of feeders, but few are better than a shallow pan from the ten-cent store with a little excel-sor in it for the bees, to walk on. If this pan filled with sirup is placed on top of the frames taking honey out is no trouble at all, when a bee escape is used, for the bees do not even know what is going on. The best way to begin beekeeping is to buy a colony or two from some up-to-date apiarist in the neighborhood, but a bive full of bees can be shipped by express or the insects may be bought by the pound if one already has an empty bive. Indeed, this is a practice which is becoming very common, for even experienced beekeepers often invest in one, two or three-pound packages of bees in order to build up weak colonies. It is not an unusual thing for bees to be shipped all the way from Texas to Canada. Sometimes wild bees may be captured in the woods and brought home. Although called wild bees, these honey makers which are found in logs and hollow trees have escaped from captivity at some time, for there were no honey bees in this country until they were brought here by the Pilgrim Fathers. If the farmer owns more than half a dozen colonies of bees it will pay him to get an extractor. This is a simple device for separating the honey from the combs, the latter being placed in a frame which revolves at a high rate of speed, the liquid honey being thrown out of the wax cells by centrifugal force, just as cream is separated from milk. Then the combs may be put back in the hives for the bees to fill again. The farmer can usually get more honey this way and will have less swarming. If the farmer owns more than half a dozen colonies of bees it will pay him to get an extractor. This is a simple device for separating the honey from the combs, the latter being placed in a frame which revolves at a high rate of speed, the liquid honey being thrown out of the wax cells by centrifugal force, just as cream is separated from milk. Then the combs may be put back in the hives for the bees to fill again. The farmer can usually get more honey this way and will have less swarming. lying on the Pacific coast of South America (like the states of California, Oregon and Washington, on the Pacific slope of the United States), covering an area of nearly 300,000 square miles, or more than that of Texas, and directly tributary to the Panama canal, bought and sold in foreign commerce products valued at nearly $202,000,000. Evan B. Stotsenburg, attorney general, tells a story concerning the early days of the telephone in New Albany. A character of the town, who operated an office in rooms just above the livery stable, was impressed with the benefits of the telephone and had one placed in his office. Meanwhile the new-fangled instrument also went into the livery stable. Then the town character sat down and waited for someone to take advantage of the new instrument. No one did. One day the telephone bell in the livery stable, however, rang with all its might. "Hello," yelled the livery stable proprietor. "Hello, yourself," answered the voice of the town character, upstairs. "Just pass me the broom up through the front windows, will you?" said the voice.—Indianapolis News. Evan B. Stotsenburg, attorney general, tells a story concerning the early days of the telephone in New Albany. A character of the town, who operated an office in rooms just above the livery stable, was impressed with the benefits of the telephone and had one placed in his office. Meanwhile the new-fangled instrument also went into the livery stable. Then the town character sat down and waited for someone to take advantage of the new instrument. No one did. One day the telephone bell in the livery stable, however, rang with all its might. "Hello," yelled the livery stable proprietor. "Hello, yourself," answered the voice of the town character, upstairs. "Just pass me the broom up through the front windows, will you?" said the voice.—Indianapolis News. Seventy per cent of the world's cork supply is said to be produced in Spain and Portugal. of the hives the bees will quickly take the liquid down and be tided over the period of famine. It is a mistake for any farmer to try to keep bees in the old-fashioned box hives, for they cannot be managed so well and getting the honey out is likely to be a painful as well as exciting process. Likewise, thousands of bees are needlessly sacrificed, and the hives are almost sure go be neglected. Modern hives cost but little, yet may be taken entirely to pieces and the bees looked over without the loss of a single one. And Advantages of the Telephone. Hamlet—I see by the papers this morning that our friend Footlits has shuffled off this mortal coil via the suicide route. Eggbert—Bah! I'll bet that is another one of his schemes to secure a little free advertising. No Shoes or Stockings "When I came over from Ireland to this country I was a barefoot boy." "You don't want me to understand that you waded over, do you?" Home Town Helps THE VALUE OF PRETTY LAWNS Make Plans Now to Beautify Grounds Around Your Home in Spring— Pergola Very Ornamental. Landscape gardening and architecture must properly include all forms of decoration that will increase the attractiveness of the lawn, and such as will add at the same time a monetary value to the home. It is not desired to have simply a pretty lawn, but one that will enhance the value of the property itself, says House and Garden. There are many things that will materially increase the value of the lawn from an artistic standpoint. Among these may be mentioned the pergola. It is one of the newer forms of lawn decoration in this country, but deserves encouragement on the part of the real home lovers, whose desire is to add to the home plan. One should understand, however, that the pergola is not simply a decoration. It possesses useful features in addition to its attraction as an ornament, and wherever erected increases the charm of the setting. It serves as a bower, a retreat, and a nook. It may be covered with vines, and serve as a refuge from inclement weather. Frequently it lends into the lawn and sometimes to the garage, or terminates at a pond or miniature garden. At other times it will serve as a bridge, with columns at either end, in this way spanning an otherwise open ravine and adding to the architectural effects of the home. In country homes it has a special place, because of the expanse that many of the country abodes possess, thereby making its necessity more keenly felt. Thus we see that the pergola is in reality a useful ornament, and one that is finding more general favor as home-builders come to realize its need. It should be given a fair share of the construction man's consideration. The study of the varying materials with which it is built and the effects of the different types of architectural variations are widespread. Its very popularity has been the fundamental reason why there are today a larger number of the structural materials used in its manufacture. WE WANT REAL HOMES AGAIN Americans More and More Understand Value of Having Residence With Some Land Around It. We are today, for the second time in America, reaching the homestead period. We had it back in the old colonial days, when we built substantially. Then came the second generation of our foreign-born population, and their spirit was expressed in elaborate and futile imitations of homes unsuited to American lives. More leisure has come to us, a more settled spirit of patriotism that breeds sympathy with all national achievement, and the time now seems ripe for the building of homes suited to the American spirit, substantial, comfortable, facing the servant problem frankly, realizing a growing interest in beauty, expressing, too, the keynote of our civilization — individually, says the Craftsman. Because we are demanding homes of the type that we want to live in, home building has become the most absorbing topic of this generation. Whereens even a few years ago the difficulty was to keep the country boy and girl in any way attached to the land, the city holding the lure that unbalanced all youth, today the world is reaching back to home life, gardening, farming; you find boys who work in the city telling you frankly that they travel many miles a day rather than give up country life. You find young women planning from the day of their marriage to have a home of their own, built to their needs, furnished as they like it. BEAUTY VALUABLE IN ITSELF When You Plant Shrubs Around Your Home Remember Some Are Useful and Ornamental, Too. A very practical writer in a popular magazine recently condemned the American custom of planting purely ornamental trees and shrubs. Such things, he contended, performed no useful work, and ought to be discarded. The redbud and flowering almonds should give place to cherry and peach trees; and roses and spires, precumably, should make way for currants and gooseberries. Only thus could we have a garden scheme worthy of a practical people. There are elements of truth in such a doctrine. Too many people fail to recognize the beauty inherent in plants, trees and shrubs cultivated for food—in a cherry tree orchard, in a field of blossoming clover or ripening wheat. But the central idea of this practical creature is false altogether, for he fails to recognize that beauty is worth while in and of itself, and needs no indorsement from either stomach or pocketbook. Mohammed knew what he was about when he uttered his famous advice: "He that hath two loaves of bread, let him sell one and buy narcissus; for bread is food only for the body, but narcissus is food for the soul."—Boston Courier. Her Wish. "I wish I were dead," said he, after the quarrel. His wife did not join in this melancholy yearn. "I wish you were insured," she did say—Kansas City Journal. "Then who knows who was the old est woman?" "Nobody, my son." MR. A. T. MOORE is successful undertaker who has just added new seven-passenger up to the minute Pac- ce and pleasure of his patrons and the pu- tion of Kansas City's most progressive ar- tic in every movement calculated to advan- give them standing in the business world have need for a high class car with a care hesitate to call Mr. Moore at 1820 East 18 J; Home East 4020. the popular and successful undertaker who has just added to his splendid establishment a new seven-passenger up to the minute Packard Limousine for the convenience and pleasure of his patrons and the public in general. Mr. Moore is one of Kansas City's most progressive and enterprising business men and in every movement calculated to advance the race's interest as well as give them standing in the business world he has been in the fore front. If you ever have need for a high class car with a careful and competent driver, don't hesitate to call Mr. Moore at 1820 East 18th Street. Bell phone East 4224-J; Home East 4020. LADIES LISTEN! There is a real American drawnwork artist in the city who does Oriental work in anything you wish. She takes orders and gives instruction private, and later on will be able to give public instruction and will be glad to do your Christmas drawn work and embroidery. Mrs. Lee, 1228 Michigan. YOU CAN BE BEAUTIFUL LET US HELP YOU CAN BE BUTIFUL HELP YOU WE SPECIALIZE IN HAIR GONDS ALL THE LATEST STYLES IN W SWITCHES, ETC. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUR MONEY BACK IF NOT SAVED. WE SELL THE FINEST HAIR ENING COMB IN THE NONE BETTER MODE. FREE! A CATALOGUE TO MENTIONING THE NAME THIS NEWSPAPER. Halo Hair Gon 647 STEINWAY AVENUE L.I.C. NEW 40ENTS WANTED DON'T FORGET YOU CAN BE BEAUTIFUL LET US HELP YOU WE SPECIALIZE IN HAIR GOODS AND SELL ALL THE LATEST STYLES IN WEIGS, PUTTN, SWITCHIS, ETC. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUR GOODS MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED. WE SELL THE FINEST HAIR STRAIGHT-ENING COMB IN THE WORLD NONE BETTER MADE. FREE! A CATALOGUE TO EVERYONE MENTIONING THE NAME OF; THIS NEWSPAPER. Halo Hair Company 647 STEINWAY AVENUE L. I. C. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED Butter-Cream BREAD Order From Your Grocer Today NAFZIGER BAKING CO. "The Cleanest Bakery in the world" CALL US UP (At Eighteenth & Paseo) Toilet Article Prescriptions filled at by Graduate Reg Anything in Drug Line Peoples D Expert Dental OF KAN Our work has stood the test. We ha tal Work for the past 29 years. W REMEMBER, IN All work kept in SAVE MONEY EXAMINA All work guard The doctor who extracts your teeth b in this line than any other dentist in ice. Art Articles Deliv scriptions filled accurately and pro- vide Graduate Registered Pharmacist Peoples Drug Store Art Dental Special OF KANSAS CITY good the test. We have been doing high class the past 29 years. We have thousands of sa- t REMEMBER, IN BUSINESS 29 YEARS. All work kept in repair free of charge. NEY EXAMINATION FREE All work guaranteed 20 years. GET extracts your teeth here has undoubtedly ha- any other dentist in the city, so you get the BRIDGE W Prescriptions filled accurately and promptly by Graduate Registered Pharmacists. Our work has stood the test. We have been doing high class guaranteed Dental Work for the past 29 years. We have thousands of satisfied patients. REMEMBER, IN BUSINESS 29 YEARS All work kept in repair free of charge. The doctor who extracts your teeth here has undoubtedly had more experience in this line than any other dentist in the city, so you get the most expert service. BRIDGE WORK Spaces where from one to ten teeth have been lost we replace with bridge work. It looks the same as natural teeth, lasts a lifetime and requires no plate. Broken down teeth we restore to beauty and usefulness with crowns of porcelain and gold. GOLD CROWNS, $3, $4 AND $5 WHITE CROWNS, $3, $4 AND $5 SET OF TEETH, UPPER AND LOWER, $5.00 AND UP NEW YORK DENTAL CO. 1017-19 Walnut Street Over Jaccard's Jewelry Store, 1 door north Emery, Bire, Thayer Co. WHITE CROWNS, $3, $4 AND $5 SET OF TEETH, UPPER AND LOWER, $5.0 YORK DENTAL 2017-19 Walnut Street Bird's Jewelry Store, 1 door north Emery, Birn WHITE CROWNS, $3, $3, AND $5 SET OF TEETH, UPPER AND LOWER, $5.00 AND UP Over Jaccard's Jewelry Store, 1 door north Emery, Bire, Thayer Co. Home Phone East 4082 Anything in Drug Line MRS. MAMIE HILL. The Never-Failing, Painstaking and Reliable HAIRDRESSER, Wishes to see all old and new cus tomers at her new residence, 1804 East Eleventh Street. Bell Phone, East 2426W. WE SPECIALIZE IN HAIR GOODS AND SELL ALL THE LATEST STYLES IN WIGS, PUTTIN, SWITCHING, ETC. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUR GOODS MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED. WE SELL THE FINEST HAIR STRAIGHT- ENING COMB IN THE WORLD NONE BETTER MADE. FREE: A CATALOGUE TO EVERYONE MENTIONING THE NAME OF; THIS NEWSPAPER. Halo Hair Company 647 STEINWAY AVENUE L. I. C. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED Cicles Delivered and accurately and promptly Registered Pharmacists. Drug Store Everything for the Toilet Total Specialists KANSAS CITY We have been doing high class guaranteed Den- We have thousands of satisfied patients. IN BUSINESS 29 YEARS in repair free of charge. INATION FREE guaranteed 20 years. GET THE BEST which here has undoubtedly had more experience in the city, so you get the most expert serv- BRIDGE WORK Spaces where from one to ten teeth have been lost we replace with bridge work. It looks the same as natural teeth, lasts a lifetime and requires no plate. Broken down teeth we restore to beauty and usefulness with crowns of porcelain and gold. CROWNS, $3, $4 AND $5 UPPER AND LOWER, $5.00 AND UP K DENTAL CO. Walnut Street e, 1 door north Emery, Bire, Thayer Co. Bell Phone East 1814 THE KANSAS CITY SUN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1916 Y. M. C. A. Notes The block of boulevard paving passing the Y. M. C. A. building connecting the spread of the Paseo north of Eighteenth to the Terminal vladuct will be one of the most beautiful, when finished next week, in the city. The renovating and tinting of the Cafeteria walls will be finished about the same time the street is opened. --- The opening Men's Meeting of the Topeka association last Sunday was attended by practically all the leading men of that city. Dr. D. W. Griffith and Secretary R. B. DeFrantz made the principal addresses. It is hoped that as enthusiastic audience will be in attendance at the opening Men's Meeting of the Paseo association next Sunday, Oct. 1st, at 3:30 u. m. Professors Hodge, Buster, King, Wilburn, Brown, Jacobs, Starnes, Kansas side teachers, and Messrs, C. A. Franklin, A. V. Pepp and F. K. Douglass are enrolled in the new Gym class that meets Tuesdays at 8:15 p.m. Among the doctors in the city who are in gym classes are Dr. T. A. Fletcher, Dr. T. E. Gray, Dr. E. J. McCampbell, Dr. J. T. McCampbell, Dr. W. H. Bruce and Dr. T. C. Chapman, Dr. J. E. Perry has signified his intention of enrolling in a gym class within a week. The physicians recognize the value of physical training. The year's membership, including the physical privileges may be had for $5.00 for a year if taken before Oct. 4th. Last spring Prof. G. W. Moore, of Moorehouse College, Atlanta, Ga., was appointed field secretary by the International committee of the Y. M. C. A. to work exclusively with the Boy's department. He will spend the week of Oct. 21-26 in Kansas City, at which time it is expected he will conduct a Boy's Work Institute. The creating of intelligent interest in the growing boy on the part of parents and the community will be the object of the institute. LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL "All things come to those who wait," consequently we are at last to have a physical culture teacher for our girls. When Prof. Lee announced Mme. Benton Dean, the popular milliner, resides at 1010 Troost avenue, where she is elegantly located and will be extremely pleased to meet her many friends and customers at that number. Bell phone Main 2102J. The Handy Colored Store 2409 Vine St. Ladies' and Gent's Furnishing Goods and Notions VISIT OUR DRY GOODS AND HARDWARE DEPT. BARGAINS SPECIAL BARGAINS IN OUR NOTION DEPARTMENT AND HAIR GOODS. Help Make Our Store, Your Store, Our Customers Your Friends Special Values in Furnishings for Men, Women and Children. GIVE US A CALL. Full Line of School Supplies Taylor Holmes & Co. Mrs. Annie Holmes, Mngr. 2409 VINE ST., Kansas City, Mo. Bell Phone East 1298-J. ORIGINAL $16 TAILORS Clothes Made As You Want Them MASON & MASON 3 Stores 220-22 East 12th Street., 914 Main St. 204 W. 12th St. The Kansas City Sun can be found on sale in Chicago at A. D. Hayes, 3640 State Street. that Miss Jeanette Mack, whose home is in St. Louis and who comes from Dr. Sargent's school for physical training in Boston would arrive soon, he was greeted by much applause from boys and girls. During the chapel exercises Friday morning, September 22, when this announcement was made Dr. T. A. Jones, the newly appointed medical inspector of our school, explained briefly and explicitly his plans for the year. As usual we are always having the honor of meeting from our platform many distinguished visitors the most recent of whom was the Hon. John Mitchell, Jr., of Richmond, Va., the only Negro member of the American Bankers' Association which has been in our city this week. His presence and words were, indeed, welcome to both faculty and pupils who exhibited their appreciation by rising, applauding and giving cheers as Hon. Mitchell entered the Assembly Hall. Our enrollment has reached 451 and we are still hoping for more entrances. The pupils have grouped themselves according to their class standing during the past two weeks in order to organize their class clubs. So far all have elected officers and in the case of the senior class have begun the publication of the "Lincolnian." LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS The many friends of Mrs. Martha Hawkins who has been ill will be sorry to learn that she is not so well as she has been...Mesdames America S. Coutte, J. A. Cohn, M. J. Runyan, Nancy Lowery, Rosa Henderson and Geo. Holloway, who have been very sick, are improving...Rev. C. R. Runyon left Tuesday for the Annual Conference at Wichita, with the best wishes of all who know him...Miss Geraldine Jones has returned to Manhattan to resume her duties at the university...The T. E. O. Class held the first meeting of the season on the 16th with Mrs. G. W. Lyman, on Wiowa street. The meeting of the 23d was with Mrs. Matt Hodges Townsend, and the next meeting will be with Mrs. Wm. January...Mrs. L. V. Halm spent the week in Kansas City...The names of Mrs. Beatrice Parker and Mrs. Henry Johnson were omitted from the Mesdames who attended the Ebenezer Choir Carnival by mistake...Miss Louise Bruce leaves Saturday for Ann-Arbor, Mich., to resume her studies in the university there...The U. B. F.'s and S. M. T.'s of the Kansas Jurisdiction held their ninth annual Grand session in this city last week There were between 150 and 175 delegates from different parts of the state A grand time was had by all...Mrs. Thos. Ewing and daughter, Miss Lucene, spent last Saturday in Kansas City where they want to meet Mrs. Benj. Ewing, who was returning from a vacation spent in Illinois and Indiana...Mr. Henry Bird who has been indisposed for several months is about the same...The chicken dinner given by the Meridian Heights club of the Independent Baptist Church was a grand success socially and financially. Mrs. Henry Green, president...Mrs. Emma Gaines, of Topeka, was the week-end guest of Mrs. Jas. Chevers, on Tenth street...News of the very sudden and unexpected death of Sargt. Lumpkins of the 10th Cavalry retired, was a shock to his many friends here...Burial was in the Military Creamatory at Ft. Leavenworth. The family has the sympathy of us all who knew Sargt. Lumpkin...Mrs. R. Lawrence Hawkins formerly of this city but now of Chicago, was the guest of his sister, Mrs. Edw. Adams, for a week...Miss Blanche Shepard returned to her home in Jarblo after a week's visit with her aunt, Mrs. Robt. Emery...Mrs. A. G. Hunt, who is the reporter for the Joplin Reminder of Croberg and Pittsburg, Kansas, and her son Theo, are visiting her mother, Mrs. Nancy Lowrey...Mrs. Jno. W. Samp son spent the week with her mother in Topeka and attended the Fair...The Mesdames L. V. Halm, Louis Pounet and Beatrice Parker attended the Lumpkin funeral in Kansas City, Kansas, last Sunday and returned on the funeral car with the party...The Jr. Stewardess Board presented Rev. and Mrs. Runyan with a present as a token of their appreciation and esteem at the closing of the conference year and wished them God's speed...Mrs. Robt. Wyche spent Saturday in Kansas City, Kansas, with her mother Mrs. Smith...Mr. Geo. W. Lyman attended the funeral of Mr. P. C. Kin caid in Kansas City last Sunday...Robt. E. Anderson spent last Sunday in the two Kansas City with friends ...Miss Blanche House of Kansas City, Mo., and the Mesdames L. B. Downs and Lul Richardson, of Kansas City, Kansas, were the week-end house guests of Mrs. Geo. Walker on Kiowa street....Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Carter entertained last Sunday with a very beautifully appointed dinner Covers were laid for six....Mrs. Chas McNairy returned to her home in To peka after spending several days with Mrs. R. E. Anderson....Mrs. Theo Fields has gone to Omaha where she expects to spend the winter....Mrs Elmer J. Moore of Casper, Mo., is the city to spend the winter with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Richardson, Sr. ISMERT-HINCKE MILLING CO. MADAM KATIE MARTIN'S "Sanitary" Hair Preparations "Sanitary" Hair Preparations are just what the name implies. They cleanse and cure the scalp of all diseases, such as Dandruff, Tetter or Eczema, and finally produce a thick growth of hair. Madam Katie Martin has given a careful study to hair and scalp culture and is prepared to meet the demands of the people. She manufactures all of her preparations I began to use Madam Martin's "Sanitary Hair Preparations" March 1st, 1915. I can positively say that Madam Martin's "Sanitary Hair Preparations" have produced results that no other preparations have done. My scalp was in a very bad Any information desired consult, MRS. HARRIET FRISTO, 2223 Woodland Ave. Kansas City, Mo. When writing to Madam Martin Manufacturing Co. enclose two-cent stamp for postage if answer is desired. A six weeks' trial treatment will convince any one of the value of Madam Martin's Sanitary Hair Preparations. A six weeks' trial treatment consisting of Sanitary Shampoo, 50c; Sanitary Grower, 50c; Sanitary Glossine, 35c; Sanitary Temple Grower, 35c, will be sent to any address in United States, prepaid, for $1.70. No goods sent C. O. D. AGENTS WANTED! GOOD PROFIT! Madam Katie Martin has give pared to meet the demands of I have been taking treatment from Mine. Martin for about three months. My hair has grownwonderfully—three inches. My scalp is perfectly clean of disease, which was never so before. Sanitary Hair preparations have given me perfect satisfaction. I recommend them highly. MRS. KATIE BROOKS, 2112 W. Prospect, Kansas City, Mo. I began to use Madam Martin's "Sanitary Hair Preparations" March 1st, 1915. I can positively say that When writing to Madam M if answer is desired. Quinoleum Is Queen YES, I Use Quinoleum, and like it fine. JUST FOLLOW DIRECTIONS. Ours are the finest made preparations for the hair and face. What We Manufacture— Hair Preparations. Quinoleum Hair Grower.....50c Quinoleum Hair Tonic.....50c Quinoleum Hair Shampoo.....25c Face Preparations. Quinoleum Face Bleach.....25c Quinoleum Face Cream.....25c Quinoleum Camphor Ice.....25c A liberal sample of our new preparation, a fragrantly perfumed toilet powder and a velvety face powder in pink and flesh colors (brown) sent free with any order. Call Bell Phone West 1757. 26th and Parkway, Kansas City, Kas. QUINOLEUM MANUFACTURING COMPANY. THE A. M. E. EPISOPAL CHURCH —BIGELOW'S MISSION. Will hold services at 230 Garfield, third and fourth Sunday of each month. Sunday school at 9 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m., 3 p. m. and 7 p. m. Every Wednesday 2 p. m. prayer meeting; 7:30 preaching. New mission connected at 534 Lydia. Every Tuesday evening class and prayer meeting. Also Friday, 1st and 2nd Sunday. Preaching all day and Sunday school at 2:30 every Sunday. Take the Fifth Street car going east and get off at Garfield. Walk one block north. You will see the sign. All are cordially invited. REV. MRS. L. B. ALEMAN, 534 Lydia avenue. $1.75 and $2.00 will start any child to school with good shoes on. See Page at 1507 E. 18th St. ISMERT-HINGKE MILLING CO. I-H BEST PATENT HARD WHEAT FLOUR. KANSAS CITY. U.S.A. I-H Treating Scalps and Growing Hair Taught for $25.00 Write for Information. MME. KATE MARTIN Scalp Specialist 2220 MICHIGAN AVENUE KANSAS CITY, MO. BELL PHONE, E. 3936W. Even a careful study to hair and scalp culture and is pre of the people. She manufactures all of her preparation and scalp culture and is pre- tures all of her preparations condition; my hair was about 1½ inches in length, but after three months' treatment with Mme. Martin's Sanitary Hair Preparations my hair has grown 3¼ inches. her preparations are wonderful. Before using my hair was very thin on account of my bad scalp, but now it is thicker than it has been for years and it has grown several inches since March 1st, 1915. MRS. G. H. SMITH, 3406 E. 6th St., Kansas City, Mo. Madam Martin's "Sanitary Hair Preparations" have produced results that no other preparations have done. My scalp was in a very bad condition; my hair was about 1½ inches in length, but after three months' treatment with Mme. Martin's Sanitary Hair Preparations my hair has grown 3¼ inches. For many years I used many other preparations, but found nothing that would heal my scalp and grow my hair, until I used Mme. Martin's Preparations. I highly recommend them. Any information desired consult, MRS. HARRIET FRISTO, 2223 Woodland Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Martin Manufacturing Co. enclose two-cent stamp Bell Phone E. 4394Y Office 2460 W. THE Modern Builder A. E. ESTES, President General Contract Repairing a Special Have a Box of ORO Sent by ARCEL OST Poro College Co., 3100 Pine St., Dept. G. Office 2460 Waldrond Ave. Builders Co. ES, President Contracting a Specialty Have a Box of ORO Sent by ARCEL OST ne St., Dept. G. St. Louis, Mo. A. E. ESTES, President General Contracting Repairing a Specialty Poro College Co., 3100 Pine St., Dept. G. St. Louis, Mo. Please mention name of this paper when writing. CALDWELL & CHAPMAN Hair and Millinery 18th and Paseo, Kansas City, Mo. Home Phone East 4009 Scalp Treatment a Specialty. Caldwell's Pomade and Tonic really Grows Hair. Try it. Save your combings, cut hair and any old hat you may have. Hair Matched From Samples. Feathers and Hats Cleaned. Dyed and Blocked. Agents for Spirella Corsets. Mail orders answered promptly WORK GUARANTEED. LIVE AGENTS WANTED & CHAPMAN Millinery , Kansas City, Mo. One East 4009 Caldwell's Pomade and Tonic really Save your combits, cut hair that you may have. Feathers and Hats Cleaned, Dyed and sets. Mail orders answered promptly LIVE AGENTS WANTED Scalp Treatment a Specialty. Caldwell's Pomade and Tonic really Grows Hair. Try it. Save your combings, cut hair and any old hat you may have. Hair Matched From Samples. Feathers and Hats Cleaned, Dyed and Blocked. Agents for Spirilla Corrents. Mail orders answered promptly FACIAL MASSAGE Palace of Fashion and Beauty MRS. BIRDIE JACKSON MME LILY HAIR DRESSE and Beauty Parlor Palace of Fashion and Beauty Parlor MME LILLIE JOHNSON HAIR DRESSER AND BEAUTY SPECIALIST Scalp Treatment a Specialty Latest and Most Approved. Methods —In— Manicuring and Massaging Northwest corner 18th St. and Hi BELL PHONE—EAST 4788 St. and Highland Ave. NNE—EAST 4788 Northwest corner 18th St. and Highland Ave. BELL PHONE-EAST 4788 [Image of a woman with dark hair and a light-colored top]. TESTIMONIALS MRS. G. H. SMITH, 3406 E. 6th St. Kansas City, Mo PORO MARK MANICURING DESIGNER AND DRESSMAKER Latest Styles We Alter and Repair Clothing